1. surging
Pinyin: xiōng yǒng péng pài
Explanation: surging: the appearance of a flood rising violently; surging: waves hitting each other. Describes a powerful and unstoppable force.
Source: "Shanglin Fu" by Sima Xiangru of the Han Dynasty: "It boils with rage and surges." Vernacular translation: The flood surges up violently, as if it is about to be angry, and its momentum is huge and unstoppable.
An example of a sentence: The tides of the two oceans intertwined to form a surging wave. This was the wave of anti-colonialism that swept across Asia and Africa.
2. Momentum:
Pinyin: shēng shì hào dà
Explanation: Momentum: prestige and momentum; Hao: vast. The prestige and momentum are very strong.
Source: Chapter 16 of "The Strange Current Situation Witnessed in Twenty Years" by Wu Jianren of the Qing Dynasty: "Actually, they have nothing to do, and they don't necessarily cause trouble to the place, but they are just huge."
p>Example sentences: The huge parade marched towards the rostrum with neat steps.
3. Majestic
Pinyin: qì shì páng bó
Explanation: Majestic: the appearance of being vast and boundless. Describes the majestic and powerful momentum.
Source: Guizhuang, Qing Dynasty, "Preface to the Customized Chronicles": "The author of "Breaking Waves", after Wuyin, changed his style. He generally discussed passionately, was majestic, galloped vertically and horizontally, and did not stick to the rules of rope and ink. "Zuo Ye." Vernacular translation: After Wuyin, the original pattern changed. Most of the discussions were passionate and majestic. They were able to move freely in that field and were no longer restricted to articles that conformed to laws and regulations.
Example sentence: This is a majestic page in the modern history of China.
4. Vast and mighty
Pinyin: hào hào dàng dàng
Explanation: It originally describes the vastness of water. Later, it describes the vastness and growth of things, or the huge flow of people moving forward.
Source: Song Dynasty Fan Zhongyan's "Yueyang Tower": "It is vast and boundless." Vernacular translation: The water looks vast and boundless.
An example of a sentence: For a moment, I saw the grand funeral of Ning Mansion coming from the north like a mountain of silver pressing down on the ground.
5. Magnificent waves
Pinyin: bō lán zhuàng kuò
Explanation: Originally used to describe the vastness of the water. Now it is a metaphor for majestic momentum or huge scale.
Source: Bao Zhao of the Southern Dynasties and Song Dynasty, "A Letter to My Sister on Climbing Dalei'an": "The travelers are poor and hard, but the waves are magnificent." Vernacular translation: Travelers walk very hard, and the momentum is huge.
Example sentences: A seven-character poem must be magnificent, sudden and exciting, and open and close.