大珠小珠落玉盘

大珠小珠落玉盤
dàzhūxiǎozhūluòyùpán
phrase

Meanings

  1. 1 large and small pearls falling onto a jade plate
  2. 2 the sound of pipa notes cascading like pearls on jade

Examples

Cáocáo qièqiè cuòzá tán, dà zhū xiǎo zhū luò yù pán.
Loud and soft strings mingling as she plays — like large and small pearls falling on a jade plate.
Tā tán pípá de shēngyīn zhēn měi, yóurú dà zhū xiǎo zhū luò yù pán.
Her pipa playing is truly beautiful — like large and small pearls dropping onto a jade plate.

Tips

history
From Bai Juyi's 《》 (Tang dynasty, 816), the greatest Chinese poem about music. The line describes the pipa player's rapid finger-work: 。 The pearls-on-jade image became the permanent metaphor for beautiful plucked-string playing.
usage
Used to praise crisp, sparkling music — especially pipa, guzheng, or piano. Can also describe anything clear and crystalline, such as clinking teacups or chiming bells.

Stroke Order

zhū
xiǎo
luò
pán