- 狼奔豕突 lángbēnshǐtū to tear about like wild beastsLike the wolf runs and the wild boar rushes; describes crowds of evil-doers milling around or people fleeing in a state of panic and confusion.
- 豕突狼奔 shǐtūlángbēn to flee in panicto flee or tear about like wild beasts; describes fleeing in a panicked or disorderly way, or the violent rampaging of villains.
- 鲁鱼亥豕 lǔyúhàishǐ clerical errorCopying or typographical errors caused by characters that look similar, such as confusing [[鲁|魯|lu3]] with [[鱼|魚|yu2]] or [[亥|亥|hai4]] with [[豕|豕|shi3]]
- 封豕长蛇 fēngshǐchángshé rapacious and ruthless(idiom) a great pig and a long serpent; used to describe people who are extremely greedy, cruel, and violent
- 三豕涉河 sānshǐshèhé clerical errortranscription error caused by misreading characters that look similar; literally three pigs crossing the river, a mistake for a date in historical records
- 三豕渡河 sānshǐdùhé transcription errorrefers to mistakes made in the process of copying, printing, or transmitting text; based on a story where the characters for "ji hai" (a date) were misread as "three pigs" (san shi)
- 亥豕 hàishǐ typosHandwriting or typographical errors caused by the confusion of characters with similar forms. This term originates from a legend where the character for "three" was mistaken for "ji" and "pig" was mistaken for "hai"
- 亥豕之误 hàishǐzhīwù clerical errora mistake in writing or printing due to similarity in characters; a typo
- 人豕 rénshǐ human piga brutal form of torture involving the amputation of limbs and removal of sensory organs, famously inflicted upon Lady Qi by Empress Lü Zhi
- 豕交兽畜 shǐjiāoshòuchù to treat people like beaststo treat people without respect or like animals. Derived from Mencius to describe providing food without love or love without respect.
- 豕心 shǐxīn greedygreedy; avaricious; refers to a pig's heart as a metaphor for insatiable greed
- 豕突 shǐtū to run wild(literary) to run about wildly like a charging boar; used to describe a mob or group of bandits raiding and causing destruction
- 豕豞 shǐhòu grunting of pigsthe sound of pigs grunting
- 辽东白豕 liáodōngbáishǐ to be naive and narrow-mindedUsed to describe a person with limited experience who mistakes something common for a rare marvel, or as a self-depreciating term for one's own ignorance
- 辽东豕 liáodōngshǐ naïvetéThe state of being naive due to limited experience or narrow horizons; often used as a self-deprecating expression of shame for one's own ignorance.
- 辽豕 liáoshǐ Liao swinea rare white pig from the Liaodong region used as a metaphor for something common that is mistakenly thought to be a precious rarity due to narrow experience
- 野豕 yěshǐ wild boar
- 鹿豕 lùshǐ boorish and ignorantDescribes someone who is crude, wild, or foolish; literally referring to deer and swine as symbols of unrefined nature.
Sources
- Frequency data
- MTSU Chinese text computing