be most willing to
Willing, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī ng ā NQ í ngyu à n, which means that the heart is completely willing, not forced. It's more of a voluntary sacrifice. From "Zhiqing zashuo · Xiang sirang".
The origin of Idioms
Wang Ming and Qing Dynasty's "Zhiqing zashuo · xiangsilang" in Song Dynasty: "this matter is willing."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonyms: forced, complaining, full of complaints, forced helpless, drive the duck to the shelf.
Idiom usage
Wenzhou is not a very poor place, and it has never been in a famine. Why do you want to give your little sister to others when you get seven cents? Trace of Wenzhou by Zhu Ziqing
be most willing to
Don't cover up great virtue with one brush - bù yǐ yī shěng yǎn dà dé
a dog trying to catch mice -- too meddlesome - gǒu ná hào zǐ
The public cultivates the public morality and the old cultivates the old morality - gōng xiū gōng dé,pó xiū pó dé
travel the length and breadth of the country - zǒu nán chuǎng běi
the fallen grass and sinking cesspool - zhuì yīn luò hùn