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Farewell greetings from friends

Bon voyage, Bon voyage, Bon voyage, smooth sailing and all the best \x0d\ 1. Bon voyage [y and l ù sh ù nf ē ng] \ x0d \ Explanation: Bon voyage (often used to wish others). \x0d\ from: Qing Wenkang's Biography of Heroes of Children: The 19th time: "During the bon voyage, I suddenly said that I wanted to ask for leave to go back to my hometown." \x0d\ Second, have a pleasant journey [y and f ā nsh ù nf ē ng] \ x0d \ Explanation: The metaphor is smooth, without any obstacles. With "smooth sailing". \x0d\ comes from the 41st chapter of The Water Margin written by Nai 'an, Shi Ming: "Three big ships carried many leaders' horses, but they went to Mu Taigong Village. They sailed smoothly and landed early." \x0d\ III。 Have a safe trip [yī lü pí ngā n] \ x0d \ Explanation: It means that there was no accident during the trip. It is also used to greet people who go out. \x0d\ from: Feng Ming Menglong's Novel of Ancient and Modern Times Volume 19: "Have a safe journey, and after more than a month, I came to the old anchorage." There was no accident during the journey, \x0d\ it took more than a month to reach the place where the ship stopped before. \x0d\ IV。 Smooth sailing [y and fānf chün]\ x0d \ Remarks: The ship sailed with full sails. This metaphor went smoothly without any obstacles. \x0d\ from: Jiao's "Into Hunan": "A sail in one day makes a thousand miles of wind." \x0d\ translation: Make sure that you know the sail of one day, and you will get the wind of thousands of miles \ x0d \ v. Everything goes well [wà nshi ē ngt not ng] \ x0d \ Explanation: Smooth sailing: access. Everything is going well. \x0d\ from: Lvyuan Li's "Qiludeng" in Qing Dynasty, the sixty-fifth chapter: "Brother Kong did his best to cure Brother Guan's illness first."