at the mercy of nature
Destiny, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti ā nm ì ngy ǒ ugu ī, meaning the fate arranged by God. From the romance of Fengshen.
Idiom explanation
Destiny: God's will; return: destination.
The origin of Idioms
In Chapter 33 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of the Ming Dynasty, "if the world is divided into three parts, the land of Zhou has been divided into two parts
Analysis of Idioms
It's up to fate
Idiom usage
It refers to the arrangement of heaven. He used to be the son-in-law of Daji's uncle. He was making a sacrifice. Knowing that his destiny was certain, he came to the Ming Dynasty with 50 carts of luggage and 800 slaves. Lu Xun's new stories: picking Wei and Chen Shou's history of the Three Kingdoms: Shu Shu Shu biography of Zhuge Liang: "it's our destiny to cover the sky. We can't compete with each other intellectually."
at the mercy of nature
steal what is entrusted to one 's care - zhǔ shǒu zì dào
check erroneous ideas at the outset - fáng wēi dù xìn