A reed is navigable

A reed can sail

Chinese idiom, pinyin is y and w ě i k ě há ng, which means that a reed can sail by making a boat out of a bundle of reeds. It is a metaphor that the water surface is very close and it is not difficult to cross it. It is also called "sailing a reed", and it is a metaphor that things can be solved with meager strength. From The History of the Three Kingdoms Wu Shu He Shaochuan.

Explain

A reed: a bundle of reeds. A boat made of a bundle of reeds can pass through. [1]

(1) Metaphorically, the water surfaces are very close and it is not difficult to cross. Also known as "sailing a reed".

(2) metaphor can solve things with meager strength.

making sentences

1. In terms of the current situation, Japan and Fujian and Zhejiang are navigable.

2. China and Japan are separated only by a strip of water, and a reed is navigable. Therefore, China-Japan relations need to be far-sighted.

3. A reed is navigable between Shanghai and Ningbo, which is much more convenient instead of trekking around the two sides of the triangle of Hangzhou Bay.

4. A reed can sail, build diplomatic relations and persuade farmers to attack mulberry; Successors, ambitions must be repaid, the wind of the gentleman, the mountains and waters are long, "also hanging here."

5. "Who says a river is wide and a reed can sail?" Cui Xiliang quoted a poem from The Book of Songs.

6. "The Bohai Sea and the Wang Yang River are navigable, and the diplomatic relations between the two countries are encouraged to attack agriculture and mulberry; Successors, ambitions must be repaid, the wind of the gentleman, the mountains and waters are long, "also hanging here."

7. The strait is shallow, originally a reed is navigable, and the homesickness is deep, and the two sides of the strait are singing together; Hoping for China, great rivers and mountains are perfect, and looking forward to tomorrow, a bright future will be created.