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千鈞一髮. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
千鈞一髮, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
千鈞一髮 in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
千鈞一髮 you have here. The definition of the word
千鈞一髮 will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
千鈞一髮, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
Chinese
Etymology
Based on a passage in Liezi:
龍誑魏王曰:『有意不心。有指不至。有物不盡。有影不移。髮引千鈞。白馬非馬。孤犢未嘗有母。』 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
龙诳魏王曰:『有意不心。有指不至。有物不尽。有影不移。发引千钧。白马非马。孤犊未尝有母。』 [Classical Chinese, simp.]- From: Liezi, 1st – 5th century CE
- Lóng kuáng Wèiwáng yuē: ‘Yǒuyìbùxīn. Yǒuzhǐbùzhì. Yǒuwùbùjìn. Yǒuyǐngbùyí. Fàyǐnqiānjūn. Báimǎfēimǎ. Gūdú wèicháng yǒu mǔ.’
- Long deceived the King of Wei, saying: "There are intentions (concepts) but these are not minds. There are zhi (pointings out, significations, representations) but these do not reach (things). There are things but they are not exhausted. There are shadows but they do not move. A hair draws (a weight of) one thousand jun. white horse is not horse. An orphan calf never had a mother."
Later used to metaphorically mean "a crucial and emergent moment" in Book of Han & by Tang dynasty's writer Han Yu (Chen, 2014):[1]
其危如一發引千鈞 [Literary Chinese, trad.]
其危如一发引千钧 [Literary Chinese, simp.]- From: 韓愈 Han Yu 〈與孟尚書書〉, "Letter to Secretary Meng", included in 《全唐文》 The whole collection of Tang period literature, Vol. 553
- Qí wēi rú yīfāyǐnqiānjūn
- It is so emergent like a hundred weight hanging by a hair.
Pronunciation
Phrase
千鈞一髮
- imminent peril; a matter of life or death
References
- ^ Chen, Cheng. (2014). "A Contrastive Study of English and Chinese Temporal Metaphors
from the Perspective of Culture" . Review of European Studies Archives Vol. 6, No. 1