The poem of riding the tide is: occasionally riding the tide, riding the tide to the boundless. The pinyin is chéngcháo o, and the phonetic notation is ㄔㄥㄔㄠ _. The structure is: multiply (mosaic structure) tide (left and right structure).
What is the specific explanation of "Braving the Wind and Waves"? We will introduce you through the following aspects:
I. Text Description Click here to view the details of the plan.
1. means go with the flow. 2. Go with the flow. 3. Extended to follow the crowd.
Second, the citation interpretation
1. It refers to sailing in the tide. Quote Liu's Song of Picking Lotus in Tang Dynasty: "Picking lotus when young, riding the tide when fifteen." Biography of Zhang Hongfan in Yuan Dynasty: "Hong leads the army to go with the flow, while others go with the flow." Go with the flow. Quote Liu Yuanqing's "The Giant Fish in Five Springs in the Border of Xian Yi": "There are fish in the spring sea, so you can't go out at low tide." 3. Extended to follow the crowd. Quote Lu Xun's "Two Arguments on the Pavilion": from "His Words": "It can make some aspiring reformers hesitate for a moment, and change from a frolicker to a frolicker. "
Third, online interpretation
Follow the trend.
Poetry about controlling the trend
Let go of the ocean, sail cold at dawn, pick lotus songs, get into the habit of taking advantage of the tide and go to Yupu Zuo Zuo.
Idioms about braving the wind and waves
Thoughts are ups and downs, grief is like a tide, Han Haichao rings, Su Chaochao surges, taking advantage of the trend, Su Hai.
About riding the wind and waves
Clouds, tides, crowds, ebb and flow, Su Hai, Han Dynasty, Hanhai Su Chao, ebb and flow, praise, thoughts and grief.
Click here to see more details about riding the wind and waves.