To Overstate the Fact
| Characters: |
 |
Pronunciation:
Yan(2) Guo(4) Qi(2) Shi(2)
Explanation:
Said of exaggerations
Tone:
Neutral
The Story: Ma Su was a general of the
Kingdom Shu in the Three Kingdoms period.
He was a man who really seemed to have unusual
abilities and loved to talk about military
strategy very much. Once he suggested to the
military advisor Zhuge Liang to use the strategy
to win the enemy's intention. Zhuge took his
advice and indeed defeated the enemy. Thus
Zhuge thought highly of him. But Liu Bei,
the king of Shu, warned Zhuge that Ma tended
to overstate beyond his actual ability. Zhuge
had a different view and didn't take Liu Bei's
warning seriously.
In
A.D. 228 Kingdom Shu attacked Kingdom Wei.
Zhege Liang appointed Ma Su as the vanguard
of the army to defend the strategic place,
Jieting. Being self-reliant, Ma Su stationed
his army at an unfavorable place. As a result,
he was surrounded by the enemy and defeated.
According to the military law, he had to be
beheaded! He was killed when he was 39 years
old. There goes a literary quotation "Behead
Ma Su in tears", meaning Zhuge Liang
felt regret for appointing Ma Su to such an
important position and it was against his
will to kill Ma--but he had to. Oh dear.....
Usage
Example (Pinyin): Bie(2) yan(2) guo(4)
qi(2) shi(2), zhe(4) bu(4) shi(4) lao(3) ban(3)
de feng(1) ge(2).
Usage
Example (English translation): Don't overstate
the fact. It's against the boss's style.
Note:
The spoken Chinese Mandarin language has 4
spoken tones. We have attempted to re-create
those above where after each syllable we tell
you (1), (2), (3), or (4) as they correspond
to each of the 4 tones. We encourage you to
complement your Xianzai.com Chinese Idioms
newsletter with a good offline study program.