build bridges across the rivers
The Pinyin is y ù Shu ǐ di é Qi á o, which is a Chinese idiom. It means to build a bridge when you are blocked by water. I'm not afraid of resistance. I'm going forward bravely. It's from the coat cart.
Analysis of Idioms
Bridge in the face of water
Idiom usage
When the army is in a good position to make a way, it will not be able to walk in the mud! The 50th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Yuan Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Yi Ao Che: "you don't have to line up the military academy. You can make your way at the peak of the mountain and bridge at the top of the river." The 48th chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "old master Shi has the best idea, but I still have three little disciples. Only when I find a way to go, when I meet a bridge, and when I meet a poor monk, can I come here.
build bridges across the rivers
Promote the clean and strict customs - yáng qīng lì sú
draw from one to make good the deficits of another - yì bǐ zhù zī