陳陳相因
Chinese
old old each other; appearance; portrait; picture; one another; mutuallyto follow trad. (陳陳相因) 陳 陳 相 因 simp. (陈陈相因) 陈 陈 相 因
Etymology
Originally refers to the way old grains a stockpiled in warehouses:
- 太倉之粟,陳陳相因,充溢露積於外,至腐敗不可食。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: The Records of the Grand Historian, by Sima Qian, circa 91 BCE
- Tàicāng zhī sù, chénchén xiàngyīn, chōngyì lùjī yú wài, zhì fǔbài bùkě shí. [Pinyin]
- In the Imperial Granary, old grains are stacked upon even older ones and are in turn followed by more old grains. They overflow the storage and are exposed outside in piles, until becoming rotten and unfit for consumption.
太仓之粟,陈陈相因,充溢露积于外,至腐败不可食。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
Pronunciation
Idiom
陳陳相因
- (figuratively) to become stagnant or obsolete due to rigid adherence to tradition; to be devoid of any innovation