青梅竹馬
See also: 青梅竹马
Chinese
green (blue, black); Qinghai province (abbrev.) | plum flower | hobby horse; bamboo horse used in folk dance | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
trad. (青梅竹馬) | 青 | 梅 | 竹馬 | |
simp. (青梅竹马) | 青 | 梅 | 竹马 | |
Literally: “green plums and bamboo horse”. |
Etymology
From a poem by Tang dynasty poet Li Bai:
- 妾髮初覆額,折花門前劇。郎騎竹馬來,繞床弄青梅。同居長干里,兩小無嫌猜。十四為君婦,羞顏未嘗開。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: Li Bai (701–762), Ballad of a Trader's Wife (長干里), translated by Xu Yuanchong
- Qiè fà chū fù é, zhé huā mén qián jù. Láng qí zhúmǎ lái, rào chuáng nòng qīng méi. Tóngjū cháng gān lǐ, liǎng xiǎo wú xián cāi. Shísì wéi jūn fù, xiū yán wèicháng kāi. [Pinyin]
- My forehead covered by my hair cut straight,
I played with flowers pluck'd before the gate.
On hobby horse you came upon the scene,
Around the well we played with plums still green.
We lived, close neighbors on Riverside Lane,
Carefree and innocent, we children twain.
At fourteen years when I became your bride,
I'd often turn my bashful face aside. […]
妾发初覆额,折花门前剧。郎骑竹马来,绕床弄青梅。同居长干里,两小无嫌猜。十四为君妇,羞颜未尝开。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
The same poem was also the source of the idiom 兩小無猜/两小无猜 (liǎngxiǎowúcāi), which has a very similar meaning.
Pronunciation
Idiom
青梅竹馬
Descendants
References
- 蔡俊明 [Cai Junming], editor (1991), “青梅竹馬/青梅竹马 (qīngméizhúmǎ) ts'e~˧ bue˥ tek˨꜒ be˥˧꜕꜖”, in 潮州方言詞滙/潮州方言词滙 (Cháozhōu fāngyán cíhuì), 香港 (Xiānggǎng) [Hong Kong]: 香港中文大學/香港中文大学 [The Chinese University of Hong Kong]
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