1. 天下无不散之筵席/ There is no never ending banquet under the sun./ All good things must come to an end. or The best of friends must part. 2. 五十步笑百步/ The (soldier who retreated ) 50 paces jeered at the one who (retreated) 100 paces./ The pot calls the kettle black. 3. 当局者迷/ The participant's perspective are clouded while the bystanders' views are clear./ You can't see the forest for the trees ,but onlookers see the whole game. 4. 塞翁失马 / The squire at the frontier lost his horse. (The horse eventually came back bringing some other horses with it.)/ This expression has its origin in a Chinese fable. See e.g. (From the Chinavista website) Chinese Fable#6 Blessing or Bane Certain bad luck is actually "a blessing in disguise." 5. 各花入各眼/ Different flowers look good to different people/ Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. 6.. 祸不单行/ Good luck seldom comes in pairs but bad things never walk (occur) alone./ Misery loves company. 7. 以毒攻毒/ Fight poison with poison/ Fight fire with fire 8. 花开堪折直需折 / Pick the flower when it is ready to be picked . / Gather ye rosebuds while ye may. 9. 岁月不留人 / Age and time do not wait for people./ Time and tide waits for no man. 10. 家家有一本难念的经/ Each family has its own difficult scripture (or sutra) to recite./ Each family has its own kind of hell. 11. 虎父虎子/ Tiger father begets tiger son/ A chip off the old block. 12. 人算不如天算 / Man's schemes are inferior to those made by heaven/ Man proposes and god disposes. 13. 有钱能使鬼推磨 / If you have money you can make the ghosts and devils turn your grind stone./ Money makes the world go around. Or: Money talks. 14. 好事多磨 / Good (happenings, results, achievements etc..) must go through many trials and tribulations/ The course of true love never runs smooth. 15. 盗亦有道 / Transliteration: (Even) Theives have "their (own) way/code of behaviour" (Tao) /The "their way " (Way=Tao) can be interpreted in different ways, the most general being "Even thieves have their principles." Another interpretation is : "even the bad guys have a conscience". So, could this also mean "There is honour amongst thieve" ?. Well, a recent "Time essay" in Time's magazine seems to imply it does. Time Essay, by James Poniewozik. Page 64. Time magazine, Canadian Edition. June 24,2002. "They held up the myths of honor among thieves-we don't sell drugs, we don't kill civilians...." 16. 大丈夫能屈能伸 / A great (or successful) man can bend and stretch./ A man must learn to sail in all winds. 17. 不入虎穴,焉得虎子 / If you don't go into the cave of the tiger, how are you going to get its cub ?/ Nothing ventured, nothing gained. 18. 又要马儿好,又要马儿不食草 / You want you horse to look good but you also want it not to have to eat grass./ Want to have your cake and eat it too.(Implying: You cannot have your cake and eat it too.) 19. 无风不起浪 / There is no wave without wind./ There is no smoke without fire. 20. 入乡随俗 / Follow the local custom when you go to a foreign place./ In Rome do as the Romans do. |