Set sail refers to the first voyage of a ship, plane, etc. For example:
(1) The ship has just been built and will sail after the ceremony tomorrow morning.
(2) The new destroyer developed by China has been completed and will set sail next Wednesday.
This regional plane is made in China and is expected to set sail next month.
(4) The agricultural aircraft has been built and will set sail soon to serve agricultural production.
"Set sail" refers to ships, planes, etc. Start sailing. For example:
At five o'clock in the afternoon, the ship has set sail, and you can't catch it.
(6) These two days, the wind and waves are too strong for fishing boats to set sail.
The plane set sail at two o'clock in the afternoon and arrived in Shanghai three hours later.
(8) Before the plane sets sail, the flight attendants explain to the passengers the matters needing attention in taking the plane.
It can be seen that the difference between these two words is that "sailing" only refers to the first voyage, while "sailing" refers to the daily navigation of ships and planes.
To sum up, the dream preparation hasn't started yet, so I suggest setting sail with my dream for the first time.
Extended data
The significance of setting sail:
1, ships, planes, etc. Start sailing.
2. Nautical terminology. Sailing competition is divided into three stages: sailing, sailing and finishing. Before the start of the 10 competition, the referee ship raised a certain class flag on the transverse mast, indicating that the class ship still has 10 minutes to sail.
3. "Set sail" and "Set sail" are heteromorphic words with universality. Setting sail mostly refers to ships, planes, etc. Start sailing and act out verbs; Setting sail means that a large-scale project or something is about to start.
(In most input methods, it is Qi Hang's input that will set sail first, and then it will set sail. It is in the order of moving first and then moving, meaning first and then meaning. )
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-sailing