Three Kingdoms Idioms
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Three Kingdoms Idioms
From the Three Visits to the Peach Garden Oath — meaning, origin and source in one place
Idiom of the day
三顧草廬 Three Visits to the Thatched Cottage
To court a talented person with utmost sincerity, visiting again and again. Today it describes going to great lengths to recruit someone or win them over.
萬人之敵
HistoryA Match for Ten Thousand
Prowess worth ten thousand men — an individual so formidable they count as an army.
單刀赴會
HistoryAttending the Meeting with a Single Blade
To walk into the enemy’s parley wearing a single blade — a bold, lone negotiation in the lion’s den, won by sheer nerve.
草船借箭
NovelBorrowing Arrows with Straw Boats
Borrowing the enemy’s arrows with straw-covered boats — turning an opponent’s own attack and resources to your advantage.
七縱七擒
AnnotationsCaptured Seven Times, Released Seven Times
To capture seven times and release seven times — winning submission of the heart, not just the body, through patient magnanimity.
鷄肋
HistoryChicken Ribs
Like chicken ribs — too little meat to eat, too good to throw away — it describes something of marginal value you still can’t quite give up.
死孔明走生仲達
AnnotationsDead Kongming Routs Living Zhongda
The dead Kongming put the living Zhongda to flight — a great figure’s reputation overpowers others even after death.
食少事煩
HistoryEating Little, Toiling Much
Eating little while laboring much — working oneself into the ground. Used of someone whose workload is visibly consuming their health.
萬事俱備 只欠東風
NovelEverything Ready but the East Wind
All preparations complete — except the one decisive thing. Used when a single missing condition holds back everything.
泣斬馬謖
HistoryExecuting Ma Su in Tears
To punish even someone you cherish, in tears, for the sake of discipline and the greater cause — putting principle above personal affection.
七步之才
Later recordGenius Within Seven Paces
The gift of composing a poem within seven paces — dazzling literary genius under pressure.
髀肉之嘆
AnnotationsLamenting the Fat on One’s Thighs
Grieving that one’s thighs have grown fat from too long out of the saddle — the anguish of years slipping by with one’s ambitions unfulfilled.
水魚之交
HistoryLike Fish and Water
A bond as inseparable as fish and water — a relationship where each is essential to the other.
破竹之勢
HistoryLike Splitting Bamboo
Like bamboo that splits all the way down once the first joints crack — unstoppable momentum, victory after victory.
手不釋卷
AnnotationsNever Without a Book in Hand
Never letting the book leave one’s hand — studying at every spare moment. High praise for a devoted reader or lifelong learner.
開門揖盜
HistoryOpening the Gate to Bow the Thief In
To open your own gate and bow the robber in — inviting disaster through your own negligence at the very moment vigilance is needed.
望梅止渴
Later recordQuenching Thirst with Dreamed Plums
Easing thirst by imagining plums — sustaining people through hardship with a vivid hope, or offering comfort that is only imaginary.
刮目相對
AnnotationsRubbing One’s Eyes and Looking Again
Someone has improved so much you must rub your eyes and look again — dramatic growth in a short time.
兵貴神速
HistorySpeed Is the Essence of War
In war, divine speed is the supreme virtue — strike before the enemy can prepare. Momentum and surprise decide everything.
錦囊妙計
NovelThe Brocade-Bag Stratagems
Miraculous plans sealed in a brocade bag — contingencies prepared in advance, to be opened at each crisis. The ultimate plan B.
空城計
NovelThe Empty Fort Strategy
Throwing open the gates of a defenseless city so the enemy suspects a trap and retreats — psychological warfare that hides weakness in plain sight.
月旦評
HistoryThe First-of-the-Month Review
From a famed critique session held on the first of each month — it now means the act of appraising people or works. The origin of "monthly review" in East Asian usage.
出師表
HistoryThe Memorial on Marching Out
To declare one’s resolve before a great undertaking. "Submitting the chu-shi-biao" now means formally throwing your hat in the ring; the companion phrase jugong-jinchui means bending one’s body in utter devotion.
吳下阿蒙
AnnotationsThe Old A-Meng of Wu
Someone stuck exactly as they were — most often used in the negative: "no longer the old A-Meng," meaning utterly transformed.
桃園結義
NovelThe Peach Garden Oath
From the sworn brotherhood sealed in a peach orchard — a solemn pledge to share one purpose, through everything.
天下三分之計
HistoryThe Plan to Divide the Realm in Three
From Zhuge Liang’s grand strategy of splitting the realm into three, it means a sweeping master plan built on reading the whole board — securing your own base rather than fighting the strongest head-on.
苦肉之計
NovelThe Self-Injury Ruse
A stratagem that sacrifices one’s own flesh to deceive the enemy — accepting real self-inflicted loss to sell the lie. Now used for any painful last-resort measure.
白眉
HistoryThe White Eyebrows
The finest among many — the standout person or work in a group.
三顧草廬
HistoryThree Visits to the Thatched Cottage
To court a talented person with utmost sincerity, visiting again and again. Today it describes going to great lengths to recruit someone or win them over.
樂不思蜀
AnnotationsToo Happy to Miss Shu
So content that one forgets one’s homeland — losing oneself in present comfort and forgetting who you are and where you came from.
言過其實
HistoryWords Beyond One’s Deeds
Talk that outruns the substance — describing someone whose eloquence exceeds their real ability, or an inflated claim.
How to use
- 1
Search by hanja, reading or meaning to find an idiom.
- 2
Filter by hero (Liu Bei, Cao Cao…) or by source (history vs. novel).
- 3
Open an idiom for its meaning, origin story, modern examples and related idioms.
FAQ
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What is this tool?
Three Kingdoms Idioms is a dictionary of 30 expressions that came out of the Three Kingdoms era, from the Three Visits to the Peach Garden Oath. Each entry gives the hanja, Korean and Japanese readings, pinyin, a modern definition, a full origin story from the saga, and two modern example sentences — plus a source badge that tells you whether it comes from the official histories, their annotations, the novel, or later records. Filter by hero (Liu Bei, Cao Cao, Zhuge Liang…), search across scripts, and check the idiom of the day. Completely free, no installation or sign-up.