god is carrying out the wishes of man
The Chinese idiom Ti à NC ó NgR é NYU à n in pinyin means that heaven obeys man's will, which means that the development of things is in line with one's wish. It's from "he Han Shan".
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: heaven does not make beauty, things go against one's wishes, just the opposite
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Yuan Dynasty's Zhang Guobin's "he Hanshan" is: "who knows that heaven obeys man's wishes, and it takes less than three days to get to my home to add a full hug boy."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, an object, a clause. Chapter 4 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: I'm worried about going to Beijing to be under the jurisdiction of my uncle, and I can't squander it at will. Now I'm going out, and I know that heaven agrees with people's wishes. Chapter 13 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: on that day, when I heard that my country could only ride on the clouds but could not go, I often thought of it and wished I could see it immediately. Today, it's a wish of heaven and man. Chapter 10 of the story of heroes and Heroines: "if my father is allowed to do it, it is heaven's will." Mao Dun's "Midnight" 6: "his only hope is that Wu Zhisheng talks about it in other words, but actually" Heaven obeys man's wishes. "
god is carrying out the wishes of man
strong soldiers and sturdy horses - bīng qiáng mǎ zhuàng
warning taken from the overturned cart ahead - fù chē zhī guǐ