Break the wind and waves
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch à NGF à NGP à L à ng, which means to describe the rapid progress in the waterway. It's from Haiphong in the golden age.
Analysis of Idioms
Ride the wind and waves
The origin of Idioms
Zheng Guanying wrote in his book the dangerous words of the prosperous age: Coastal Defense: "in the past, the building ships were not as good as today's armored flywheels."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate; with commendatory meaning; mostly used in ship. Example: Zheng Guanying's "the dangerous words of the prosperous age on coastal defense": "in the old days, the building ship was not as good as today's armored flywheel."
Chinese PinYin : chōng fēng pò làng
Break the wind and waves
Keep the army for thousands of days. yǎng jūn qiān rì,yòng zài yī zhāo
order people about by arrogant. yí zhǐ fēng shǐ
The duck is short and the crane is long. fú duǎn hè cháng
Don't say I didn't warn you. wù wèi yán zhī bù yù yě
the supreme arrogance of a person with great power. zhì shǒu kě rè