好大喜功

hàodàxǐgōng
idiom #86,329

Meanings

  1. 1 to crave grand projects and big achievements
  2. 2 overambitious for glory
  3. 3 given to showy, grandiose deeds

Examples

Zhè wèi lǐngdǎo hàodàxǐgōng, shàngrèn jiù gǎo le hǎo jǐ ge miànzi gōngchéng.
This leader craves grand achievements — as soon as he took office, he launched several vanity projects.
Tā zuòshì tāshi, cóng bù hàodàxǐgōng.
He works steadily and has never been one to chase grandiose accomplishments.
Gōngsī fāzhǎn yào wěn zhā wěn dǎ, bù néng hàodàxǐgōng.
A company should grow steadily step by step — it can't be greedy for grand shows of glory.

Tips

history
Used in the Xin Tang Shu (New Book of Tang) to criticize Emperor Taizong's later years: 好大喜功 — 'fond of big things and great deeds, ceaselessly deploying troops far afield.' The term has been a standard indictment of grandstanding rulers ever since.
register
Always pejorative. Common in political commentary, business critique, and historical writing. Pairs naturally with 急功近利 (eager for quick gains) and 华而不实 (flashy but hollow).

Stroke Order

hǎo
gōng