circumstances alter cases
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "Z ā OSH í zh ì y í", which means to adjust to circumstances. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty, biography of my relatives, empress Xu Xiaocheng.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Han Dynasty, the second biography of my relatives, empress Xu Xiaocheng: "the secular age is different, the time changes, the day changes, the situation changes, the time changes, the old is not, how can we let it go?"
Analysis of Idioms
Adjust measures to the situation
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object. Examples: in the book of Sui, the first chapter of Jing Ji Zhi: "when the time comes, the quality of the text should be repeated, and the general change should be based on the general change, and the general change should be based on the doctrine of the mean."
circumstances alter cases
a myriad of stars surround the moon - zhòng xīng pěng yuè
work shame-facedly with one's enemies - miǎn yán shì dí