懸樑刺股
See also: 悬梁刺股
Chinese
to hang oneself from a beam | |||
---|---|---|---|
trad. (懸樑刺股/懸梁刺股) | 懸樑/懸梁 | 刺股 | |
simp. (悬梁刺股) | 悬梁 | 刺股 | |
Literally: “to tie (one's hair) to the rafters (so that if one falls asleep, one will be awakened), and to prick one's thighs (in order to stay awake)”. |
Etymology
懸樑/悬梁 (xuán liáng) refers to what Sun Jing (孫敬/孙敬) of Eastern Han did:
- 孫敬,字文寶,好學,晨夕不休。及至眠睡疲寢,以繩系頭,懸屋樑。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: The Book of Han, circa 1st century CE
- Sūn Jìng, zì Wénbǎo, hǎoxué, chén xī bùxiū. Jízhì mián shuì pí qǐn, yǐ shéng xì tóu, xuán wūliáng. [Pinyin]
- Sun Jing, courtesy name Wenbao, was studious. He would study from morning to night. When he felt sleepy, he would tie his hair with a string and hang it on the rafters (so that if he fell asleep, he would be awakened).
孙敬,字文宝,好学,晨夕不休。及至眠睡疲寝,以绳系头,悬屋梁。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
刺股 (cì gǔ) refers to what Su Qin did:
- 讀書欲睡,引錐自刺其股,血流至足。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: Zhanguo Ce, circa 5th – 3rd centuries BCE
- Dúshū yù shuì, yǐn zhuī zì cì qí gǔ, xuè liú zhì zú. [Pinyin]
- When he (Su Qin) felt sleepy while studying, he would use an awl to prick his thighs (in order to stay awake) until blood flew over his feet.
读书欲睡,引锥自刺其股,血流至足。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
Pronunciation
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