Lioness Roars from the East Bank of the River
| Characters: |
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Pronunciation:
he(2) dong(1) shi(1) hou(3)
Explanation:
To
describe a woman who is very bossy and perhaps
cruel to her husband
Tone:
Neutral
The
Story: In the Song Dynasty, there was
a scholar named Chen Zao, he called himself
'Mr. Dragon Hill'. He was very hospitable
and often gathered his friends to have parties
at home and called some singing girls for
fun. His wife Liu was very unhappy and jealous
about this. When she heard the girls' songs,
Liu would use sticks to hit the wall and shout
in the next room, all the guests had to leave
then.
Chen
Zao feared his wife very much, and everyone
knew this. His good friend Su Dongpo one day
joked with him and wrote a poem: "Mr.
Dragon Hill is a pathetic man; chatting with
friends until midnight; suddenly a lioness'
roar comes from the east bank; he was perplexed
and dropped his stick to the ground."
Later
the line 'lioness roars from the east bank'
was used to describe a bossy woman, especially
a wife.
Usage
Example (Pinyin): Ma(3) shang(4) hui(2)
jia(1), yao(4) bu ni(3) men(2) jia(1) you(4)
he(2) dong(1) shi(1) hou(3) le.
Usage
Example (English translation): Go home
right now, otherwise there will be a lioness
roaring from the east bank of the river in
your family.
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.