窮鼠齧狸
Chinese
exhausted; poor | rat; mouse | surname; gnaw | raccoon dog; leopard cat | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
trad. (窮鼠齧狸/窮鼠嚙狸/窮鼠齧貍/窮鼠嚙貍) | 窮 | 鼠 | 齧/嚙 | 狸/貍 | |
simp. (穷鼠啮狸) | 穷 | 鼠 | 啮 | 狸 |
Etymology
From the Discourses on Salt and Iron (鹽鐵論·詔聖/盐铁论·诏圣):
- 死不再生,窮鼠嚙狸,匹夫奔萬乘,舍人折弓,陳勝、吳廣是也。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: Huan Kuan, Discourses on Salt and Iron, c. 1st century BCE
- Sǐ bù zàishēng, qióng shǔ niè lí, pǐfū bēn wànchéng, shèrén zhé gōng, Chén Shèng, Wú Guǎng shì yě. [Pinyin]
- People cannot revive if they die, so a cornered rat will bite a cat; An ordinary man would go to assault the Emperor; A servant of a noble would destroy his bow. This is precisely the case of Chen Sheng and Wu Guang.
死不再生,穷鼠啮狸,匹夫奔万乘,舍人折弓,陈胜、吴广是也。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
Pronunciation
Descendants
- Japanese: 窮鼠猫を噛む (kyūso neko o kamu)
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