Anyone who understands the Five Elements can ask about the relationship between wind and water!
I think there is something wrong with the question you asked. The five elements are gold, wood, water, fire, and earth. They are the ancients' guess about the basic composition of the world, and there is no wind in it. (Although the five elements are related to the Bagua, and wind is related to wood, I personally feel that if you really want to look at it, you should not incorporate wind into the five elements.) The five elements are mutually reinforcing and restraining each other (you can search on Baidu for details). As for the issue of wind and water, the following are all personal thoughts and cannot be fully believed:
I think wind and water actually come from the Zhouyi Bagua: Qian, Kun, Kan, Dui, Li, Xun, Zhen, Gen . Each of the eight trigrams has its own representative things. Among them, Kan represents water, Xun (xùn) represents wind, and the others are Qian - sky, Kun - earth, Dui - swamp, Li - fire, Zhen - thunder, and Gen - mountain. The term Feng Shui should refer to Bagua. It is said that Tai Chi generates two rituals, two rituals generate four images, four images generate Bagua, and Bagua generates all things. So Bagua is the "reason" (I can't think of a more appropriate word) of all things. As for why the word Feng Shui is used, I think it has something to do with architecture. Since primitive humans (living in caves), architecture has been a very important thing, protecting against enemies, keeping out the cold, etc. The most important thing related to architecture is wind and water. For example, houses should generally face north and south (for ventilation and water avoidance), which is a very prominent example.
As for the relationship between wind and water, we should start with the Bagua, which is composed of three groups of Yin or Yang (in order, 2 to the third power is equal to 8). Yang Yao is represented by "—" and Yin Yao is represented by "-
-". The three groups stacked together form Bagua. Among them, Xun (wind) from top to bottom is: -
, -
, -
-
; Kan ( Water) from top to bottom: -
-
, —
, -
-
. Those with many yang lines become yang hexagrams, and those with many yang lines become yin hexagrams, so Xun (wind) is a yang hexagram and Kan (water) is a yin hexagram. I think Xun (wind) represents all the yang hexagrams, and Kan (water) represents all the yin hexagrams. Among the five elements, water generates wood. If replaced by Bagua, Kan (water) generates Xun (wind, from wood). However, I personally think that Feng Sheng Shui is more reasonable. There is also a word in Feng Shui called Feng Sheng Shui Qi. Add in China's monsoon climate and you can understand. Let’s talk about something simple and easy to understand. Where there is wind, the water will be different. Let’s take buildings as an example. Places without ventilation are very easy to get wet. Where there is water, the wind will be different. The wind blowing from the ocean has obviously higher humidity than the wind blowing from the ocean. High blowing from inland.
The above is my humble opinion. Any similarity is purely coincidental. You can refer to it, but you can't rely on it. If you are really curious, I recommend reading the Book of Changes.