可笑不自量

kěxiào bù zì liàng
quotation

Meanings

  1. 1 laughable, they do not know their own measure
  2. 2 ridiculing those who overestimate themselves and challenge something vastly greater
  3. 3 laughable — not self-measuring

Examples

Xiǎo chǎng xiǎng gēn guójì jùtóu zhèngmiàn jìngzhēng, zhēnshì pífú hàn dà shù, kěxiào bù zì liàng.
A tiny factory taking on international giants head-on is truly 'an ant trying to shake a great tree — laughable, not knowing their own measure.'
Tā píng yī jǐ zhī lì xiǎng bāndǎo zhěnggè hángyè, shízài kěxiào bù zì liàng.
Trying single-handedly to topple a whole industry is really 'laughable self-miscalculation.'

Tips

history
From 韩愈 《调张籍》 (middle Tang, c. 810 CE): 蚍蜉撼大树可笑不自量 (An ant tries to shake a great tree — laughable, not knowing its own measure). Han Yu wrote it defending the greatness of 李白 and 杜甫 against petty detractors. The image gave Chinese the idiom 蚍蜉撼树.
usage
Always the second half of the couplet 蚍蜉撼大树可笑不自量. Reading: here = liàng (to measure / assess), 4th tone. Modern usage mocks any David hopelessly underestimating Goliath.

Stroke Order

xiào
liàng