Chinese edit

magpie nest turtle-dove; Turtur orientalis
 
to occupy; to constitute; to make up
to occupy; to constitute; to make up; to account; to observe; to divine
trad. (鵲巢鳩佔/鵲巢鳩占) /
simp. (鹊巢鸠占)
Literally: “the magpie's nest is occupied by the dove”.

Etymology edit

From the Classic of Poetry, poem 12 (《詩經·召南·鵲巢》):


[Pre-Classical Chinese, trad.]

[Pre-Classical Chinese, simp.]
From: The Classic of Poetry, c. 11th – 7th centuries BCE, translated based on James Legge's version
Wéi què yǒu cháo, wéi jiū jū zhī.
Zhī zǐ yú guī, bǎi liǎng yù zhī.
[Pinyin]
The nest is the magpie's; The dove possesses it.
This young lady is going to her future home; A hundred carriages are escorting her.

Pronunciation edit


Idiom edit

鵲巢鳩佔

  1. to occupy or seize residences, land, positions, etc. belonging to others
  2. (figurative) to take other people's efforts and reap the profits; to reap what one has not sown

Synonyms edit