Chinese

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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)
anagram 鳩佔鵲巢鸠占鹊巢
Literally: “the magpie's nest is occupied by the dove”.

Etymology

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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

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Idiom

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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

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