Follow the waves
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ú L à ngsu í B à, which means that a person lacks his own ideas and always follows the fashion. It comes from Xiwu Jiangxiao's trilogy.
Idiom explanation
Chasing the waves: chasing the waves; following the waves: following the waves.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Lin of the Han Dynasty wrote in the book of Wu general's School: "the mud is stagnant, but you don't realize it. You drift with the waves, and there are many people who perish with them."
Idiom usage
To be an attributive or an adverbial. example flying in groups, staying alone in the middle of the water, chasing the waves and half injuring the feathers. Chen Yan's chronicle of Yuan Poetry: Song Wu
Follow the waves
your highly esteemed kindness and invaluable friendship - gāo qíng hòu yì
take pity on the poor and the old - lián pín xī lǎo
Hearing the wind is the rain - tīng jiàn fēng jiù shì yǔ
A call in the hall, step down Bainuo - táng shàng yī hū,jiē xià bǎi nuò