万条垂下绿丝绦

萬條垂下綠絲絛
wàn tiáo chuíxià lǜ sī tāo
quotation

Meanings

  1. 1 ten thousand branches hang down like green silk ribbons
  2. 2 (fig.) the canonical image of spring willows
  3. 3 (lit.) ten-thousand strands hang-down, green silk-ribbons

Examples

Chūntiān de húbiān, yángliǔ wàntiáochuíxiàlǜsītāo, měibùshèngshōu.
By the lake in spring, 'ten thousand willow branches hang down like green silk ribbons' — more beauty than the eye can take in.
Liǔ zhī bǎidòng, zhèngshì wàntiáochuíxiàlǜsītāo.
The willow branches sway — truly 'ten thousand strands hanging down like green silk ribbons.'

Tips

history
From 》(He Zhizhang, Tang, early 8th c.): 绿不知二月春风剪刀 (Jade-green dresses up a tall tree; ten thousand branches hang down like green silk ribbons. Who cut out the slender leaves? The second-month spring wind is like scissors). A four-line masterpiece on willows, universally memorized in Chinese primary schools.
usage
Inseparable from 二月春风剪刀 as the poem's crowning metaphor. (sītāo) = silk ribbons/tassels — the word is rare outside this line. is the measure word for long thin things (branches, ribbons, fish). Quote for any willow-bank spring scene.

Stroke Order

wàn
tiáo
chuí
xià
绿
tāo