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A Word is Worth a Thousand Pieces of Gold
| Characters: |
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Pronunciation:
Yi(2) Zi(4) Qian(1)Jin(1)
Explanation:
reference to a well-composed essay or poem
with ingenious use of words
Tone:
Neutral
The Story: Lu Buwei was a very powerful
businessman at the end of the Warring States
Period.
He
also organized three thousand people to create
a book named "Lu's Annals". He was
very pleased with his great work and had it
posted on Xianyang's city gates for all the
people to see. He said that if anybody could
add or delete a word from his great work, he
himself would award the person 1000 gold pieces
for each word changed. Lu Buwei was too powerful,
and nobody had the guts to change his seemingly
great writing.
Later
people use this expression to describe a talented
work, well-composed essays or a valuable speech.
Usage
Example (Pinyin): Ta(1) de jiang(3) zuo(4)
yi(1) zi(4) qian(1) jin(1), ni(3) yi(4) dang(1)
qu(4) ting(1) ya.
Usage
Example (English translation): "A word
is worth a thousand pieces of gold" when
he gives a lecture, so you must go!
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. |
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