朝秦暮楚

zhāoQínmùChǔ
idiom

Meanings

  1. 1 serve Qin in the morning and Chu in the evening
  2. 2 fickle / quick to switch sides
  3. 3 inconstant in loyalty

Examples

Zài shēngyì chǎng shàng zhāo Qín mù Chǔ bù huì yǒu hǎo xiàchǎng.
In business, switching sides constantly never ends well.
Tā zhāo Qín mù Chǔ, méiyǒu yuánzé.
He's fickle and unprincipled, swinging from one side to the other.

Tips

history
朝秦暮楚 reflects the political reality of the Warring States period (战国, 475-221 BC), when Qin () in the west and Chu () in the south were the two superpowers, and the small states between them constantly hedged their alliances. The phrase appears in Song-dynasty Chao Buzhi's () 《》: 生理四方 — 'committing one's livelihood to the four directions, surely serving Qin in the morning and Chu in the evening'.

Stroke Order

cháo
Qín
chǔ