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."
Break the wind and waves
Carrying the old and supporting the weak - xié lǎo fú ruò
adequate supply of foodstuffs and means of defense - zú shí zú bīng
god blesses the good and punish the evil - fú shàn huò yín
There are no two dragons in one abyss - yī yuān bù liǎng jiāo
have an easy control in the matter - cāo zòng zì rú
rely on one another as cheek and jowl - fǔ chē xiāng jiāng