Seizing
by Trick or by Force
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Pronunciation:
Qiao(3) Qu(3) Hao(2) Duo(2)
Explanation:
Meaning to obtain valuable things of others
through cheating or forcible means.
The Story: Mi Fu was a painter and
calligrapher of the Song Dynasty. Whenever
he heard someone owning an ancient work of
calligrapher or an ancient painting, he would
borrow it on the pretext of admiring it and
make a copy of it. He would then return the
copy to the owner and keep the genuine work
himself. Sometimes he even deliberately took
the original and the copy to the owner and
asked the owner to pick it out. Being unable
to tell the original from the copy, the owner
sometimes mistakenly took the copy.
Once Mi Fu met a man named
Cai You on a boat. Cai showed him a masterpiece
of the calligrapher Wang Xizhi of the Jin
Dynasty in his collection. Mi Fu calculated
as he looked at the calligraphy and then said
to Cai: "I like this calligrapher very
much, I would like to exchange a famous painting
for it." Cai You refused him. Mi Fu would
not give up though and walked to the bow of
the boat and said: "If you don't exchange
it with me, I'll jump into the river and kill
myself before you." Cai You had no alternative
but to agree with him.
Later, people described Mi
Fu's behaviour as "seizing by trick or
by force.", meaning someone was sly and
had strong desire of gaining other's stuff.
Usage Example (Pinyin):
zhe(4) li de dong(1) xi(1) dou(1) shi(4) bei(4)
na(4) ge(4) pang(4) zi qiao(3) qu(3) hao(2)
duo(2) lai(2) de. Ta(1) shi(4) ge(4) tu(3)
fei(3).
Usage Example (English
translation): All things here are seized
by that fat man. He is a gangster.
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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