吴刚

吳剛
wúgāng
popculture

Meanings

  1. 1 Wu Gang
  2. 2 mythological woodcutter sentenced to chop a self-healing laurel on the moon

Examples

Chuánshuō yuèliang shàng zhù zhe Wú Gāng hé Cháng'é.
Legend says Wu Gang and Chang'e live on the moon.
Wú Gāng měitiān dōu yào kǎn nà kē guìhuā shù.
Every day Wu Gang has to chop that osmanthus tree.
Wú Gāng fá guì de gùshi jiāyùhùxiǎo.
The story of Wu Gang chopping the osmanthus is known in every household.

Tips

culture
In Tang-era mythology, Wu Gang was punished by the gods for seeking immortality and banished to the moon, where he must forever try to chop down a giant osmanthus (桂花) tree that regrows with every stroke — a Chinese Sisyphus. Paired with Chang'e (嫦娥) and the Jade Rabbit () as the canonical moon inhabitants, often referenced at Mid-Autumn Festival.

In Pop Culture

吴刚 Wú Gāng fá guì
Wu Gang chops the osmanthus
Proverbial phrase for an endless futile task, Chinese counterpart to the Sisyphus myth.
嫦娥 Cháng'é
Chang'e
Moon goddess who drank an elixir of immortality and flew to the moon; shares the lunar palace with Wu Gang in later myth.

Stroke Order

gāng