Chinese edit

to collapse and be ruined beyond repair
trad. (土崩瓦解) 土崩 瓦解
simp. #(土崩瓦解) 土崩 瓦解

Etymology edit

Attested in 秦記論 by Ban Gu, which was quoted in the Records of the Grand Historian:

天下土崩瓦解 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
天下土崩瓦解 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
From: 74 CE, Ban Gu, 秦記論
Qín zhī jī shuāi, tiānxià tǔbēngwǎjiě, suī yǒu Zhōu Dàn zhī cái, wú suǒ fù chén qí qiǎo, ér yǐ zé yī rì zhī gū, wù zāi! [Pinyin]
With Qin's accumulated downward trend, the state was falling apart. Even talents like the Duke of Zhou (the founding father of the Western Zhou Dynasty) could not possibly have turned the situation around. What a mistake it was [for Jia Yi (the author of Ten Crimes of Qin) and Sima Qian (the author of the Records of the Grand Historian)] to blame this on its new emperor!

Pronunciation edit


Idiom edit

土崩瓦解

  1. to completely fall apart; to completely collapse
    • 土崩瓦解 [Classical Chinese, trad. and simp.]
      From: Guiguzi, "Mend-Break" (鬼谷子·抵巇)
      Jūn chén xiāng huò, tǔbēngwǎjiě ér xiāng fá shè. [Pinyin]
      The monarch and his officials became suspicious of each other, and their relationship fell apart, and they attacked each other.

Japanese edit

Kanji in this term

Grade: 1
ほう
Grade: S

Grade: S
かい
Grade: 5
on’yomi

Noun edit

()(ほう)()(かい) (dohōgakai

  1. the situation of completely falling apart beyond repair

Verb edit

()(ほう)()(かい)する (dohōgakai surusuru (stem ()(ほう)()(かい) (dohōgakai shi), past ()(ほう)()(かい)した (dohōgakai shita))

  1. to completely fall apart