A Castle in the Air or a Mirage
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Pronunciation:
kong(1) zhong(1) ge(2) lou(2)
Explanation:
Meaning
something is impossible to carry out
Tone:
Neutral
The
Story: Long long ago, there was a stupid
rich man. One day, he visited a friend and
saw his friend's 3-storey building. He liked
it very much. When he came back to his own
home, he called a carpenter and asked him
to build the same kind of house for him.
The
carpenter began to dig the foundations and
make the vallum. When the rich man saw this,
he asked: "What kind of house are you
going to construct?"
"A
three-storey building," replied the carpenter.
"Oh,
I do not want the 2 floors under it, I just
want the third floor," said the rich
man.
"But
how can we build the 3rd floor if we do not
have the 2 floors under it?" the carpenter
asked.
No
matter how the carpenter explained this concept
to the rich man, the rich man just insisted
on his own opinion of 'only the 3rd floor'.
Wow!
Another good idiom for daily use!
Usage
Example (Pinyin): Dang(1) wo(3) shuo(1)
ming(2) nian(2) wo(3) jiang(3) you(3) ge(4)
bao(3) bao(3) de shi(2) hou(4), suo(3) you(3)
de peng(2) you(3) dou(1) shuo(1) na(4) shi(4)
kong(1) zhong(1) ge(2) lou(2)
Usage
Example (English translation): When I
said that I would have a baby next year, all
my friends think that's a castle in the air
or mirage.
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.