Culture

10 Chinese Idioms About Face (面/脸)

Chinese idioms about face culture, reputation, and why "saving face" is so important in Chinese society.

Face (面子, miàn zi) is one of the most important concepts in Chinese social culture. These idioms reveal why reputation, dignity, and social standing matter so deeply in Chinese society.

1

抛砖引玉

pāo zhuān yǐn yù

Offer modest view to inspire better

Literal meaning: Throw brick attract jade

This elegant metaphor emerged from Tang Dynasty literary circles, where throwing (抛) a modest brick (砖) to attract (引) precious jade (玉) described the practice of sharing an simple poem to inspire superior verses from others. The story goes that a lesser-known poet presented his work to the great Li...

Example

She shared her initial idea hoping to inspire better suggestions

她分享了初步想法,希望能激发更好的建议

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2

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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3

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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4

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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5

悬梁刺股

xuán liáng cì gǔ

Study extremely hard

Literal meaning: Hang beam stab thigh

This idiom pairs two classical studying techniques: tying (悬) hair to a beam (梁) to prevent dozing off and stabbing (刺) one's thigh (股) with an awl to stay alert. These practices were attributed to Su Qin and Sun Jing, two scholars from the Warring States period who initially failed their examinatio...

Example

She studied late into the night, determined to master the subject

她深夜苦读,决心掌握这门学科

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6

纸上谈兵

zhǐ shàng tán bīng

All theory no practice

Literal meaning: Discuss war on paper

This critique emerged from the story of Zhao Kuo, a general who was well-versed in military texts but failed catastrophically in actual battle. His expertise in discussing (谈) warfare (兵) remained purely on paper (纸上). The idiom appears in historical texts describing the Battle of Changping (260 BCE...

Example

The consultant's theories proved useless when faced with real business challenges

顾问的理论在面对实际商业挑战时证明毫无用处

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7

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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8

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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9

庸人自扰

yōng rén zì rǎo

Creating unnecessary troubles for oneself

Literal meaning: Mediocre person self-disturbs

This psychological idiom describes how unremarkable people (庸人) trouble themselves (自扰) with imagined concerns, originating from Ming Dynasty philosopher Wang Yangming's writings. He observed how ordinary minds generate unnecessary suffering through excessive rumination. The phrase gained popularity...

Example

She created imaginary problems and spent days worrying about scenarios that never materialized

她创造了想象中的问题,花了好几天担心那些从未发生的情况

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10

言行一致

yán xíng yī zhì

Practice what one preaches

Literal meaning: Words and actions consistent

This idiom describes words (言) and actions (行) being consistent (一致). It embodies the Confucian ideal of integrity where speech matches behavior. The phrase appeared in texts praising individuals whose deeds fulfilled their promises. Confucius emphasized that the superior person is slow to speak but...

Example

She always practices what she preaches.

她总是言行一致。

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Quick Reference

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