The wave of the East Sea
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d ō NGH ǎ ISH ì B ō, which means the waves of the East Sea. It means that the tide of the East Sea is gone and it can not be retrieved. It comes from zuozhongzhi neifu Yamen Zhizhang by Liu Ruoyu of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It is often used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ruoyu of the Ming Dynasty wrote "zuozhongzhi: the office of Neifu yamen" and said, "even if there are those who sincerely serve the country and are tied up in self-improvement, they may not be able to sing alone. How can it be that the East Sea has passed away! "
Idiom explanation
The waves of the East Sea. It's a metaphor that the situation is gone and it can't be retrieved.
Chinese PinYin : dōng hǎi shì bō
The wave of the East Sea
be perfectly calm and collected in commanding the army. zhǐ huī ruò dìng
If you go deep into the water. ruò shè yuān shuǐ