提心吊胆

提心吊膽
tíxīn-diàodǎn
idiom HSK 7-9 #17,151

Meanings

  1. 1 to be on tenterhooks; to be scared and anxious
  2. 2 to have one's heart in one's mouth

Characters

Literally 'heart lifted up, gallbladder dangling' - in Chinese medicine, the gallbladder () is the seat of courage. When you're terrified, both your heart and courage are suspended in the air.

Examples

Kǎoshì qián wǒ zǒngshì tíxīn-diàodǎn de.
I'm always on edge before exams.
Tā tíxīn-diàodǎn de zǒuguò hēi'àn de xiàngzi.
He walked through the dark alley with his heart in his mouth.

Tips

culture
In Chinese body metaphors, (gallbladder) represents courage and nerve. 胆大 means bold, 胆小 means timid, 有胆量 means having guts. This is why 吊胆 (dangling gallbladder) conveys fear - your courage is literally hanging by a thread.

Stroke Order

xīn
diào
dǎn