Chinese edit

 
to break; to split; broken
to break; to split; broken; damaged; worn out
kettle; cauldron
 
submerge; immerse; sink
submerge; immerse; sink; deep; profound; to lower; to drop
boat
trad. (破釜沉舟)
simp. #(破釜沉舟)
Literally:break the (cooking) pots and sink the boat”.

Etymology edit

In reference to an incident which occurred during the Battle of Julu:

廬舍士卒 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
庐舍士卒 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
From: The Records of the Grand Historian, by Sima Qian, c. 91 BCE
Xiàng Yǔ nǎi xī yǐn bīng dù Hé, jiē chén chuán, zèng, shāo lúshè, chí sān rì liáng, yǐ shì shìzú bì sǐ, wú yī huán xīn. [Pinyin]
Thus Xiang Yu led his entire army across the River He (i.e. the Yellow River). He had all the boats sunk, the caldrons and clay boilers broken, and the camp lodgings burned. He further ordered that only three days' provisions should be carried. With these measures, he showed that every man was now ready to die and none of them would entertain the very idea of returning.

Pronunciation edit


Idiom edit

破釜沉舟

  1. to burn one's boats; to cross the Rubicon; to reach the point of no return