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Hua She Tian Zu (Drawing a Snake and Adding Feet)

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  • 2008-04-02 10:44:27
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The Miser-Yan Jiansheng

The Miser-Yan Jiansheng
In the novel The Scholars, a classical Chinese literary work, there's a character named Yan...

Xiao Li Cang Dao (Hiding a Dagger Behind a Smile)

Xiao Li Cang Dao (Hiding a Dagger Behind a Smile)
In the Tang Dynasty, there was a minister called Li Yifu who was always affable and smiling.

Wei Ru Lei Luan (As Precarious as a Stack of Eggs)

Wei Ru Lei Luan (As Precarious as a Stack of Eggs)
In the Spring and Autumn Period the ruler of the State of Jin gave an order to build a...

In the Warring States Period, a man in the State of Chu was offering a sacrifice to his ancestors. After the ceremony, the man gave a beaker of wine to his servants. The servants thought that there was not enough wine for all of them, and decided to each draw a picture of a snake; the one who finished the picture first would get the wine. One of them drew very rapidly. Seeing that the others were still busy drawing, he added feet to the snake. At this moment another man finished, snatched the beaker and drank the wine, saying, "A snake doesn' have feet. How can you add feet to a snake?"

This idiom refers to ruining a venture by doing unnecessary and surplus things.

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