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Chinese Idiom: Mark the Boat for the Sword (Ke Zhou Qiu Jian)

刻舟求剑
Year
-300
Views
1

Synopsis

Ke Zhou Qiu Jian is a Chinese idiom meaning to be rigid and inflexible, from a story of a man who marked his boat to find a dropped sword in the river.

The Story

The idiom Mark the Boat for the Sword comes from the text Lu Shi Chun Qiu (Master Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals). A man from Chu was crossing a river by boat when his sword fell into the water. He immediately carved a mark on the side of the boat, saying: This is where my sword fell. When the boat reached shore, he dove into the water at the marked spot to look for his sword, but naturally found nothing. The boat had already moved far away, while the sword remained where it fell.

Origin

This idiom comes from Lu Shi Chun Qiu, chapter Cha Jin.

Definition

Item Content
Pinyin ke zhou qiu jian
Meaning To be rigid and inflexible, unable to adapt
Synonyms Waiting by a stump for a hare
Antonyms Adapting to circumstances

Moral

This idiom teaches us that the world is constantly changing. If we use a static viewpoint to understand problems, we will make mistakes. We must adapt to actual conditions rather than being rigid and dogmatic.

References

  1. Baidu Baike: Ke Zhou Qiu Jian
  2. ZDIC: Chinese Dictionary
  3. Lu Shi Chun Qiu

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