Today's Chinese proverb is actually more of an idiom. However seen as I seem to be spending increasing amounts of my time marketing on projects recently this one seems very appropriate for me at the moment. As most of the time I spend trying to make other people becoming advocates, this is a phrase I would be using quite often.
When you break these characters down its meaning is very clear. To devolop and to promote (making something bigger).
fā yáng guāng dà
Advocate

Incidently I have learnt the last two of these characters with Heisig, which means 光 ray (of light) and 大 big.
Serves 4

This spicy beef and tomato soup is a very tasty wholesome meal. It is based on a rich and creamy Chinese recipe I found in a book some time ago. I served it with some prawn crackers and a nice crusty bread roll. I really love the effect of the egg nesting like clouds on top of the soup. The egg contrasts with the spicy nature of the dish.
Prep time: 10 mins
Cooking Time: 45 mins
You Will Need:
1 tsp of soy sauce
1 tbsp of rice wine
2 tbsp cornflour
pinch ground black pepper
400g beef (cut up into bite size pieces)
1 tablespoon Oil
1/2 tsp of ginger puree or grated ginger
1/2 tsp chilli flakes
4¼ cup Chicken stock
4 cloves of roughly chopped garlic
1/2 tsp of 5-spice
pinch of salt
Tin of chopped tomatos
2 Sticks of Celery
To Serve:
2 Spring Onions (Scallions)
Prawn Crackers
Crusty Bread Roll
1. Mix together the Rice wine, soy sauce, pepper and cornflour (cornstarch) in a bowl. Add the beef and turn until well coated.
2. Heat the oil in a pan. Add the beef, garlic and ginger. Stir-fry until beef becomes brown.
3. Add the stock, 5-spice, chili flakes and salt and bring to the boil. Add the tomato and celery. Cook for 25 minutes on a low heat.
4. Slowly pour in the beaten eggs (If you pour them in fast they will sink), without stirring so that they resemble clouds floating on top of the soup. Cook for a further 5 minutes.
5. Garnish with the chopped spring onion (scallion) and serve immediately.
How I Served Chinese Spicy Beef & Tomato Soup:
With a bread roll, prawn crackers and spring onions on top.
This Chinese Proverb speaks of times when you are helpless in a situation. This is used in situations such as crises where things are unavoidable. In these situations it is useful to remember 防不胜防 (you can't guard against it).
A similiar English proverb is that "My hands are tied".
shù shǒu wú cè
to have one's hands bound and be unable to do anything about it

Here are the 20 Daily Chinese Proverbs I published and translated into English, Hanyu Pinyin and Mandarin during October. I had a little trouble with keeping the proverbs daily this month due to my laptop breaking. I aim to be more on track this month.
You may also be interested in my daily proverbs for September and August.
October 1st
yǔ rì jù zēng
grow day by day; increase steadily
gè yǒu qiān qiū
Each has something they are good at / Each has its advantages
yī bào shí hán
one day's sun, ten days' frost
ài wū jí wū
love the house and its crow
luò yì bù jué
an endless stream
bù zì liàng lì
Overconfident / To overestimate capabilities
hú sī luàn xiǎng
to let one's imagination run wild
Duì niú tán qín
to play the lute to a cow
October 9th
kāi tiān pì dì
to split heaven and earth apart / Giant Steps
jǐng dǐ zhī wā
Frog in a well
hè lì jī qún
a crane standing among chickens
hǎoshì duō mó
the course of true love never runs smooth
biàn běn jiā lì
be intensified
sì shì ér fēi
Apparently right, Actually wrong
jiàn yì sī qiān
to change at once on seeing something different
hún shuǐ mō yú
to fish in troubled water
Sài wēng shī mǎ. yān zhī fēi fú.
The old man at the frontier lost his horse. How do you know it is not a blessing?
chuí xián sān chǐ
To drool over
fáng bù shèng fáng
you can't guard against it
pull down the east wall to repair the west wall
This proverb is one that describes exactly what has happed causing the current global recession. It talks about solving a problem, by creating the exact same problem elsewhere. Which is exactly what has happened in modern society shifting debt around until it got out of control.
This Chinese proverb means that sometimes things can't be prevented. Much like my recent experience of having a broken laptop could not have been prevented. This allows thought to be taken away from the incident and how to deal with it instead. If it could not have been prevented, now look to how to deal with it.
fáng bù shèng fáng
you can't guard against it

Just a quick note to say I am back, with my new laptop after my old one broke a while ago. It is very beautiful (windows 7 seems to be working well), much faster than the old laptop and has loud inbuilt speakers.
All very impressive I'm sure, but I have been busy in my absense. I started Heisig's Remembering the Simplified Hanzi as anticipated when the book came. Although I haven't been testing myself much, past asking my girlfriend to casually quiz me on them every now and then. I have learnt the first 170 fairly confidently, though not quite sticking to the 15 a day anticpated, it seems to be going well. (I think she is accidently picking some characters up too.) There are a couple of blog posts waiting to be written about this experience. They will come soon, I will also by downloading ANKI soon.
I would like to thank all of you who dropped by in my absense. I guess I will have missed out on many a blog post. I hope to get back round to you all and read some of what I have missed out on. Here is to continuing Mandarin and blogging about it.
The interenet regulator ICANN has now allowed web addresses to be in non-Latin characters – such as Chinese, Arabic, Hindi or Russian Cyrillic script. The first of these Internationalised Domain Names (IDNs) is thought to be up and running by the middle of next year.
This is quite exciting and interesting although all web addresses will still need "http://" at the beggining. It is being billed as one of the biggest changes to the interenet in the last 15 years.
The Internet had its 40th Birthday yesterday.
"Of the 1.6 billion users today worldwide, more than half use languages that have scripts that are not Latin-based," Beckstrom said at the opening of Icann's conference in Seoul, South Korea, this week. The conference approved the change today, its last day, following more than nine years of work and two years of testing.
"It's more incremental [than previous changes] but it's the single biggest change in 10 or 15 years," Beckstrom said. "It's about making the internet more global and more accessible. One world, one internet."
I think this will make browsing and learning Chinese that little bit more interesting. What are your thoughts?
- Will English people have trouble browsing the emerging populations of China & India's web presence if web addresses are in their languages?
IT Pro make an interesting point about piracy across the language barrier...
News Source : Guardian
This is another Guest post from a friend that continues to learn Mandarin. Today's guest post is from Boyd, who runs several successful and interesting blogs related to Chinese culture. Boyd runs an Business English course for Chinese speakers. Chinese speakers My favourite of Boyd's blogs is Boyd's Bijou or his Musings on China. Here is a little about Boyd's journey Learning Mandarin.
Chairman Mao famously dictated that one should 活学活用 - "live learn and live use" -- perhaps translatable as "learn by living and doing and utilize or implement by living and doing." Since I started learning Mandarin in 1987, I have taken this aphorism to heart. Attempting to implement this saying, I used some methods as follows to learn Mandarin:
- Forcing myself to interact with Mandarin speakers daily.
- Moving to and spending time in Mandarin-speaking areas such as Taiwan and China.
- Working in local companies and immersing myself in Mandarin-speaking environments.
- Reading Chinese-language newspapers daily (with dictionary in hand) and attempting to write letters to the editor.
- More recently, reading Chinese-language blogs and using character recognition input devices (so I can practice writing) and pinyin input to comment.
I wanted to do a proper post about learning Hanyu Pinyin and the Chinese tones.
I found this video which is remarkably helpful distinguishing the intials, finals and tones. Though it looks like it was made for children, It hink it is useful for anyone learning the language.
I will write a post when I get my new laptop with tables of the intials, the finals and the tones. With tips on how they are pronounced and equivalents in English. Hopefully this will give a little more deatail to what this video shows with how the syllables can be put together.
Just a quick message to those of you who do drop by here fairly often. A massive thank you for all helping me out with my Mandarin and I wanted to let you know that I haven't stopped and I certainly haven't quit writing here or learning Mandarin.
This Chinese proverb means to crave something, to desire it and this proverb although could be taken to mean to literally salivate. I prefer the meaning to have a strong desire or craving. 'to drool over'.
This Chinese proverb comes with a fine story, about a wise man. It comes to mean a blessing in disguise. When smething bad happens, we must look for the good that follows. Equally when something great happens, we must be ready for something bad to happen as a consequence. Things are comparitive; the good comes with the bad.
Sài wēng shī mǎ. yān zhī fēi fú.
The old man at the frontier lost his horse. How do you know it is not a blessing?
(the horse eventually came back bringing another fine horse with it)

Near China's northern borders lived a man well versed in the practices of Taoism. His horse, for no reason at all, got into the territory of the northern tribes. Everyone commiserated with him.
"Perhaps this will soon turn out to be a blessing," said his father.
After a few months, his animal came back, leading a fine horse from the north. Everyone congratulated him.
"Perhaps this will soon turn out to be a cause of misfortune," said his father.
Since he was well-off and kept good horses his son became fond of riding and eventually broke his thigh bone falling from a horse. Everyone commiserated with him.
"Perhaps this will soon turn out to be a blessing," said his father.
One year later, the northern tribes started a big invasion of the border regions. All able-bodied young men took up arms and fought against the invaders, and as a result, around the border nine out of ten men died. This man's son did not join in the fighting because he was crippled and so both the boy and his father survived.
Story source: http://choyshinglin.xanga.com
Photo souce: Flickr
This Chinese proverb describes someone taking advantage of a confused situation. It is similiar in use to 趁火打劫 (to loot a burning house.)
hún shuǐ mō yú
to fish in troubled water

China seems to like to be the best at everything, even if it doesnt always turn out the way they had intended. (See South China Shopping Mall for example) Also see 'The Onions' satirical and funny take on a certain recent rather large parade.
Here are two Chinese building projects that are fantastic but a little crazy:
An origami inspired, drive through automobile museum in Nanjing the capital of Jiangsu province in the east.

Telegraph
"You visit the first external ramp of the museum with your own private car, like a SAFARI, you park your car on the roof and visit by foot the internal ramp going down," said Francesco Gatti of 3Gatti, the architecture studio which won the commission.
The cars actually will sit at gravity defying angles. Weird...

The second of these designs is less crazy... But does make you wonder what is next to be copied...
The Chinese are Replicating Washington DC's Pentagon, a new shopping mall in Nanhui, Shanghai.

It wil be 40 minutes by car from Shanghai's center. This building is not only impressive externally, but it is actually a very smart design. The logistics mean that people can circulate freely inside. The US Pentagon is said to have been designed so that employees can reach any office inside in under seven minutes on foot.
Firstly, my Heisig book came today. Excited!!!! (due to being busy I start learning tomorrow.)
The main reason for this post is that I have been asked by several people recently, to include Heisig's suggested 1500 Traditional characters as I had eluded to them in a previous post.
Heisig proposes a method of learning where you only learn the meaning of the character and a way to remember how to write it through a story of its primitives and their meanings. Not the pronounciation in tones or the pinyin.
I include links to buy both the traditional characters (listed below) and the simplifed characters I talked about last week.
I apologise for not organising them as neatly as the last post. But I hope those that had asked for them, will be happy.
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This Chinese proverb serves as a warning to us. It talks about how some people are never satisfied with what they have. It is also important to realise that happiness is found in moments not things.
This proverb is used to describe how someone might follow a fad, and as soon as it falls out of fashion change to something new.
jiàn yì sī qiān
to change at once on seeing something different

Photo Source: Flickr
This Chinese proverb describes perfectly what I hope the Heisig method of learning Mandarin will do to my learning process. Intensify it.
This proverb is actually more often used in a negative way though. How one may aggravate or cause a situation to intensify through their actions.
biàn běn jiā lì
be intensified

The further story behind the character 本 (běn) can be found over at Grace Lee's How do you know Chinese?
Photo Source: Flickr