Character

8 Chinese Idioms About Greed & Excess

Cautionary Chinese idioms about greed, excess, and the dangers of always wanting more.

Chinese wisdom strongly warns against greed and excess. These idioms describe the many faces of avarice and its inevitable consequences - from never being satisfied to losing everything.

1

好逸恶劳

hào yì wù láo

Love ease, hate work

Literal meaning: Love ease hate work

This idiom describes the human tendency to love (好) ease (逸) and hate (恶) work (劳). First appearing in pre-Qin philosophical texts, it was used by Mencius to warn against the natural but problematic inclination toward comfort over effort. The phrase gained particular significance during the Song Dyn...

Example

The team's productivity suffered from members who avoided challenging tasks

团队中有人喜欢偷懒避难,影响了工作效率

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2

近水楼台

jìn shuǐ lóu tái

Advantage from close connections

Literal meaning: Pavilion close to water

First appearing in Tang Dynasty poetry, this idiom describes pavilions (楼台) close (近) to water (水), referring to their advantageous position to catch the moon's reflection first. The phrase gained wider usage during the Song Dynasty as a metaphor for privileged access or favorable positioning. Origi...

Example

Living in the city gave her more career opportunities

住在城市给了她更多的职业机会

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3

偷梁换柱

tōu liáng huàn zhù

Deceive by substitution

Literal meaning: Steal beam swap pillar

This idiom refers to the cunning act of stealing (偷) beams (梁) and swapping (换) pillars (柱), derived from a Warring States period tale of architectural deception. The story involves a craftsman who gradually replaced a building's support structure while maintaining its appearance, ultimately comprom...

Example

The investigation revealed that key data had been subtly altered

调查显示关键数据被巧妙地篡改了

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4

一叶障目

yī yè zhàng mù

Miss big picture

Literal meaning: Leaf blocks eye

This idiom illustrates how a single (一) leaf (叶) can block (障) one's vision/eyes (目). Emerging from Buddhist texts warning against limited perspective, it gained prominence during the Song Dynasty's Neo-Confucian movement. The deceptively simple image of a leaf blocking an entire view became a power...

Example

The team got lost in technical details and forgot the project's main goal

团队陷入技术细节而忘记了项目的主要目标

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5

借花献佛

jiè huā xiàn fó

Use others' resources

Literal meaning: Borrow flower offer Buddha

This Buddhist-influenced idiom describes borrowing flowers (花) to offer (献) to Buddha (佛), originating from Tang Dynasty temple practices where worshippers would sometimes borrow flowers from temple gardens for their offerings. The practice sparked philosophical discussions about the nature of since...

Example

He took credit for the team's work during the presentation

他在演示中把团队的工作据为己有

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6

自相矛盾

zì xiāng máo dùn

Contradict oneself

Literal meaning: Spear shield contradict self

This idiom originates from a famous logical paradox in the Han Feizi, where a merchant claimed to have a spear (矛) that could pierce anything and a shield (盾) that could block anything - creating a self (自) contradicting (相) claim. The story became a classic example in Chinese logical discourse, use...

Example

The policy's conflicting requirements made implementation impossible

政策中相互矛盾的要求使得实施变得不可能

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7

出类拔萃

chū lèi bá cuì

Excellence that outshines all others

Literal meaning: Rise above the crowd

This distinguished idiom describes emerging (出) from a category (类) and rising above (拔) the crowd (萃), originating from the Book of Later Han. It first described officials whose exceptional talents distinguished them from colleagues. The agricultural metaphor suggests a plant growing noticeably tal...

Example

Her research paper was clearly superior to all others submitted to the conference

她的研究论文明显优于提交给会议的所有其他论文

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8

不相上下

bù xiāng shàng xià

Evenly matched with neither superior

Literal meaning: Not mutually up down

Han Dynasty military strategists developed this elegant phrase to describe forces without (不) mutual (相) superiority or inferiority (上下). Initially used for armies whose different strengths created overall parity, Tang Dynasty writers expanded it to compare everything from scholarly works to artisti...

Example

The two championship finalists were so evenly matched that predicting a winner was impossible

两位冠军决赛选手势均力敌,无法预测谁会获胜

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