Draw a Snake with Feet
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Pronunciation:
hua(4) she(2) tian(1) zu(2)
Explanation:
A figure of speech to describe adding something
that does not exist or to do something redundant.
Tone: Negative
The Story: Long long
ago, in the Chu Kingdom, a family held a sacrifice.
After the ceremony, the host offered a bottle
of wine to the servants. There were quite
a few servants but only one bottle of wine.
Then one man proposed: "Every one draw
a snake on the ground". The first one
who completed it would get the wine as a prize.
After discussion, they all agreed.
One man finished his drawing
very quickly, he looked at others and saw
they were still drawing, then he said: "You
are too slow, let me add several feet to my
snake." But when he drew feet on the
snake, another man finished his drawing, he
strode to the wine and said: "snakes
do not have feet, how can you draw it that
way?" After saying this, he drank the
wine.
Usage Example (Pinyin):
Bie(2) hua(4) she(2) tian(1) zu(2), wo(3)
xiang(3) xin(4) zhong(1) de hua(4) dui(4)
ta(1) lai(2) shuo(1) yi(3) jing(1) hen(3)
qing(1) chu(3) le.
Usage Example (English
translation): Don't draw a snake with
feet. I think the letter is clear enough for
her.
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.
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