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
make up a deficiency by the surplus - jué cháng xù duǎn
get punished quickly for the evil one has just done - xiàn shì xiàn bòo