Ride the wind and make waves
Riding the wind and waves, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é NGF à NGX à NGL à ng, meaning to take the opportunity to stir up trouble. It comes from the introduction of Western learning to the east by Rong Hong of the Qing Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
It was written in Chapter 19 of Rong Hong's the introduction of Western learning to the East in the Qing Dynasty: "when Wu Jianzi heard about it, he took advantage of the wind and waves and tried to destroy the office."
Discrimination of words
Degree of common use: General emotional color: derogatory words grammatical usage: as predicate and object; used for good people idiom structure: partial formal generation time: Modern synonym: making waves
Ride the wind and make waves
There is a knife on the willow tree and blood on the mulberry tree - liǔ shù shàng zháo dāo,sāng shù shàng chū