The wind swayed the clouds
It is a Chinese idiom, which refers to the rise of the Yellow River. It comes from the ode to Xidu written by Ban Gu of the Han Dynasty: "then the wind rises and the clouds sway, floating and spreading.".
interpretation
Fly up with the wind and cloud. It's also a metaphor for prosperity.
source
Ban Gu's Ode to Xidu in the Han Dynasty: "then the wind swayed and the clouds swayed Wang Bo's Ode to Jiucheng palace in the Tang Dynasty said, "the wind and the clouds are swaying, and I have a rest in the capital of God."
Examples
Give gold, divide silk, offer grace and splendor, and make people purple and tiny. The poem of March 3 in Guizhou written by song Zhiwen in Tang Dynasty
usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : fēng jǔ yún yáo
The wind swayed the clouds
leave only after each has enjoyed himself to the utmost. jìn huān ér sàn
disappear like snow when hot water is thrown on it. rú tāng guàn xuě
words cannot express all one intends to say. shū bù jìn yì