炙手可熱

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Chinese[edit]

broil hand; convenient; ‑er
 
can; may; able to
can; may; able to; certain(ly); to suit; (particle used for emphasis)
 
heat; to heat up; fervent
heat; to heat up; fervent; hot (of weather); warm up
trad. (炙手可熱)
simp. (炙手可热)
Literally: “burn your hand, feel the heat”.

Etymology[edit]

From a poem by Du Fu:

炙手可熱絕倫近前丞相 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
炙手可热绝伦近前丞相 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
From: Tang dynasty, Du Fu, Fair Ladies: A Ballad (《麗人行》), translation by Stephen Owen, The Poetry of Du Fu
Note: This is a satire of the minister Yang Guozhong on the occasion of a visit, when he was accompanied by his favourite Lady Yang (Yang Guifei), and her two sisters.
Zhìshǒukěrè shì juélún, shèn mò jìnqián chéngxiàng chēn. [Pinyin]
Heat that can burn the hands, power beyond all measure―
Take care not to come close before the Minister's angry glare!

Pronunciation[edit]


Idiom[edit]

炙手可熱

  1. arrogance of the powerful; a mighty figure no-one dares approach
  2. (neologism) popular; hot; selling like hotcakes