Finance

10 Chinese Idioms About Wealth & Prosperity

Auspicious Chinese idioms about wealth, fortune, and achieving prosperity through wisdom and effort.

Wealth and prosperity have always been celebrated in Chinese culture, but with an emphasis on earning fortune through virtue and wisdom. These idioms reflect both aspirations and warnings about riches.

1

披沙拣金

pī shā jiǎn jīn

Find value among worthless

Literal meaning: Sift sand pick gold

This idiom emerged from gold panning techniques along ancient China's river systems, where sifting (披) through sand (沙) to pick out (拣) gold (金) required patience and discernment. Originally used in Han Dynasty texts to describe the careful evaluation of historical documents, it gained prominence du...

Example

The talent scout had a knack for finding promising athletes in small rural schools

星探有在小乡村学校发现有潜力运动员的独特能力

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2

胸有丘壑

xiōng yǒu qiū hè

Have great vision

Literal meaning: Hills and valleys in heart

First appearing in Tang Dynasty literary criticism, this phrase describes having hills (丘) and valleys (壑) within one's heart/mind (胸). It originated from descriptions of landscape painters who could visualize entire scenes before touching brush to paper. The metaphor suggests a rich internal landsc...

Example

The architect had a clear vision for the city's transformation

建筑师对城市的改造有着清晰的愿景

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3

世外桃源

shì wài táo yuán

Perfect peaceful place

Literal meaning: Peach spring beyond world

This phrase describing a peach (桃) blossom spring (源) beyond (外) the world (世) comes from Tao Yuanming's famous 5th-century prose poem about a fisherman discovering an isolated utopia. The story of finding a hidden valley where people lived in perfect harmony, unaware of the empire's political turbu...

Example

The remote mountain retreat offered perfect sanctuary from city stress

偏远的山林度假村为城市压力提供了完美的避难所

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4

纸醉金迷

zhǐ zuì jīn mí

Decadent luxury lifestyle

Literal meaning: Paper drunk gold confused

This idiom describes a decadent lifestyle where one becomes intoxicated (醉) with wealth symbolized by gold (金) and surrounded by deeds/contracts on paper (纸) to the point of confusion (迷). First appearing in Tang Dynasty poetry criticizing wealthy merchant households, it gained prominence during the...

Example

The young heirs lived in luxury, oblivious to the real world's hardships

这些年轻的继承人生活在奢华中,对现实世界的艰辛毫无察觉

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5

兼收并蓄

jiān shōu bìng xù

Embrace diverse ideas inclusively

Literal meaning: Gather all store together

This inclusive approach advocates gathering (收) comprehensively (兼) while storing (蓄) everything together (并), originating from Tang Dynasty intellectual movements. It gained prominence through scholar-officials like Liu Zongyuan who advocated synthesizing Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist wisdom rath...

Example

Her research methodology incorporated diverse approaches from multiple disciplines

她的研究方法融合了多个学科的各种方法

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6

左右逢源

zuǒ yòu féng yuán

Find advantage in all directions

Literal meaning: Left right meet springs

This fortunate idiom describes encountering (逢) springs/resources (源) whether turning left or right (左右), originating from Tang Dynasty descriptions of ideal terrain for settlement. It initially described geographical locations where water sources were abundant in all directions, representing perfec...

Example

The versatile consultant solved problems across different departments effortlessly

多才多艺的顾问毫不费力地解决了不同部门的问题

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7

纸上富贵

zhǐ shàng fù guì

Success in theory not reality

Literal meaning: Wealth on paper only

This illusory idiom describes wealth and status (富贵) existing only on paper (纸上), originating from Ming Dynasty commercial critiques. It first described merchants who maintained elaborate account books showing theoretical profits while actually struggling financially. The specific reference to paper...

Example

The entrepreneur's business looked impressive in presentations but generated little actual revenue

这位企业家的业务在演示中看起来令人印象深刻,但几乎没有产生实际收入

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8

曲高和寡

qǔ gāo hè guǎ

Sophisticated work appreciated by few

Literal meaning: Tune high harmony few

This cultural idiom observes that when a tune is too sophisticated (曲高), few can harmonize (和寡) with it. It originates from the 'Book of Han' biography of music master Li Yannian, whose complex compositions impressed Emperor Wu but remained inaccessible to ordinary listeners. During the Tang Dynasty...

Example

The experimental film received critical acclaim but struggled to find a mainstream audience

这部实验电影获得了评论界的赞誉,但难以吸引主流观众

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9

川流不息

chuān liú bù xī

Continuous flow; never-ending stream

Literal meaning: River flows without ceasing

This idiom describes rivers (川) flowing (流) without (不) ceasing (息). The natural image of perpetually flowing water represents continuous movement or activity. The phrase appeared in classical texts describing busy markets and prosperous cities. It captures the vitality of constant activity. Modern ...

Example

The busy street sees constant traffic day and night.

这条繁忙的街道车流川流不息。

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10

有教无类

yǒu jiào wú lèi

Education for all without discrimination

Literal meaning: Provide education without discrimination

This idiom describes having (有) education (教) without (无) categories (类). It comes from the Analects expressing Confucius' principle that education should be available regardless of social class. He accepted students from all backgrounds. Modern usage advocates for equal educational opportunity rega...

Example

The scholarship program aims to make education accessible to all.

奖学金项目旨在有教无类,让所有人都能接受教育。

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Quick Reference

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