谈虎色变

談虎色變
tánhǔsèbiàn
idiom #93,274

Meanings

  1. 1 to turn pale at the mere mention of a tiger
  2. 2 to be terrified at the very thought of something

Examples

Jīnglìguò nà chǎng dìzhèn hòu, tā duì yúzhèn tánhǔsèbiàn.
After living through that earthquake, the mere mention of aftershocks terrifies him.
Tóuzīzhě yī tídào nà jiā gōngsī jiù tánhǔsèbiàn.
Investors turn pale at the mere mention of that company.

Tips

history
From the 《全书·遗书》 (writings of the Cheng brothers, Song dynasty): a peasant who had been mauled by a tiger reacted with visible fear when others merely discussed tigers, while ordinary listeners were unmoved. Real experience gives words their weight.
usage
Use when someone has been scarred by an experience and now reacts viscerally to anything that brings it up — financial crashes, illnesses, exams. Stronger than just 'afraid'; implies trauma.

Stroke Order

tán
biàn