张冠李戴

張冠李戴
zhāngguānlǐdài
idiom

Meanings

  1. 1 to put Zhang's hat on Li's head
  2. 2 to attribute something to the wrong person
  3. 3 to mix up or confuse one thing with another

Examples

Nǐ bǎ liǎng wèi zuòjiā de zuòpǐn zhāngguānlǐdài le.
You've mixed up the two authors' works and attributed them to the wrong people.
Zhè duàn huà shì Lǔ Xùn shuō de, nǐ què zhāngguānlǐdài, shuō chéng shì Hú Shì de.
This quote is Lu Xun's, but you've misattributed it to Hu Shi.
Yǐnyòng míngyán shí yào xiǎoxīn héduì, miǎnde zhāngguānlǐdài.
Be careful to verify quotations to avoid attributing them to the wrong person.

Tips

history
Recorded in Ming scholar Tian Yiheng's 《》, citing a folk saying: 'Zhang's hat ends up on Li's head.' Zhang and Li are the two most common Chinese surnames — equivalent to swapping 'Smith's hat' for 'Jones's' in English.
usage
Classic for misattribution: quotes, authorship, credit for ideas, faces to names. Milder than 颠倒黑白 (invert black and white), which implies deliberate distortion.

Stroke Order

zhāng
guān
dài