There's nothing to be desired
Chinese idiom, w ú D à sh à Gu à in pinyin, means not waiting to use Yarrow and tortoise shell for divination, but good or bad fortune has been revealed, which means that the development of the situation is obvious. It comes from the book of changes.
Idiom usage
Examples
If I want to support a big country from the left corner of the river, I have no choice but to win or lose.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of changes, the first part of the book of Songs: "to explore the hidden, to go deep and to go far, in order to determine the good and bad fortune of the world, and to become the eloquence of the world, there is no greater than the yarrow turtle."
Idiom explanation
Waiting: waiting; yarrow turtle: Yarrow and tortoise shell, used by the ancients for divination. Not waiting to use Yarrow and tortoise shell divination, and good or bad has come to light. It means that the development is obvious.
There's nothing to be desired
attend upon one 's parents personally - hūn dìng chén xǐng
there was no parallel in history - shǐ wú qián lì
Tao and Yi belong to each other - dào jìn xiāng shǔ
mouth parched and tongue scorched - kǒu gàn shé jiāo
the man through whose hands passing large sums of money - guò lù cái shén