I'll follow you
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī f ù y ǐ NGC ó ng, which means that the branches are attached to the trunk and the shadow follows the form. Metaphor follows the model. It comes from the essay of Wen Xin Diao Long by Liang and Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the essay of Wen Xin Diao Long, written by Liang and Liu Xie in the Southern Dynasty, there are more than ten schools of thought
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
I'll follow you
Seven nests and eight generations - qī wō bā dài
The pheasant scurrying in a flurry - zhì fú shǔ cuàn
The struggle between the two sides - wō jiǎo zhī zhēng
be confused like a tangle of flax - máng wú tóu xù
fearless of death for a just cause - dà yì lǐn rán