the sea is calm
Haibuyangbo is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is h ǎ IB ù y á NGB ō, which means peace. From Han Shi waizhuan.
The origin of Idioms
The fifth volume of Han Shi waizhuan records that when King Cheng of Zhou Dynasty was in power, the Duke of Zhou was regent and the kingdom of Yueshang came to the court. His envoys said, "I have been ordered to have the yellow hair day of the kingdom for a long time. The sky is not fast, the wind is fast, the rain is fast, and the sea is not overflowing. There are almost saints in China who are willing to go to court. ".
Idiom usage
Example: Mei Dingzuo's yuheji · Kuhai in Ming Dynasty: "I heard that in the world of peace, the sea did not raise its waves, and it is safe today." Chen Gongyin's Rao Ge in the Qing Dynasty: "the sea does not raise waves, and all nations are well-known. The three Wu, Fujian and Zhejiang provinces take advantage of the wind."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: the sea never overflows
Chinese PinYin : hǎi bù yáng bō
the sea is calm
be irreconcilable opposed to. shì bù liǎng cún
Hanging a cart around a horse. xuán chē shù mǎ
flirt near the door with passers-by. yǐ mén mài qiào
Teaching is not always a teacher. jiào wú cháng shī