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How to say "to eat bear heart and leopard gall (idiom)" in Chinese

吃熊心豹子胆

chī xióng xīn bào zi dǎn

food · restaurant · advanced · neutral

foodrestaurantadvancedneutral

When To Use It

"to eat bear heart and leopard gall (idiom)" maps to 吃熊心豹子胆 (chī xióng xīn bào zi dǎn), a neutral food phrase for restaurant situations.

Use it with servers, vendors, or food-stall staff when ordering, clarifying ingredients, or managing a meal politely.

Practice it first exactly as written, then swap in your own people, places, or objects so it becomes part of your active speaking repertoire.

Tone And Delivery

The register is neutral, which makes it flexible: safe in most daily situations without sounding stiff or overly intimate.

Because this is marked advanced, pay attention to nuance, tone, and whether a simpler phrase might be safer in fast conversation.

A good practice target is the example sentence 吃熊心豹子胆 (chī xióng xīn bào zi dǎn). Once that feels natural, shorten your pause and try it at conversation speed.

Practice Ideas

This phrase becomes more useful when you learn it as part of a mini-sequence. After saying it, a natural next step could be 天上掉馅饼 (tiān shàng diào xiàn bǐng).

A second nearby phrase to review is 酒逢知己千杯少 (jiǔ féng zhī jǐ qiān bēi shǎo), which helps you stay in the same topic instead of translating from scratch again.

  • Read the example “to eat bear heart and leopard gall (idiom)” aloud, then replace one detail with your own information.
  • Pair it with “A meat pie falls from the sky (idiom)” next so your conversation does not stop after a single line.
  • Match the phrase to your tone of voice: soft for polite requests, flatter and quicker for routine daily use.
  • If you hear a slightly different version in the wild, compare the tone and context before treating it as interchangeable.

Examples

  • 吃熊心豹子胆

    chī xióng xīn bào zi dǎn

    to eat bear heart and leopard gall (idiom)

Related

Explore more phrases on the How to say index or try the Chinese Name Generator.

Phrase FAQ

吃熊心豹子胆 (chī xióng xīn bào zi dǎn).

Use it in restaurant situations where a neutral tone fits. Because it is tagged advanced, it is meant to be practical and reusable rather than literary or highly specialized.

Yes. Every phrase page includes pinyin with tone marks, plus example sentences so you can hear how the wording expands in real use.

A useful follow-up is 天上掉馅饼 (tiān shàng diào xiàn bǐng) — "a meat pie falls from the sky (idiom)". Studying connected phrases in small clusters makes them easier to recall in conversation.

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