咄咄稱奇

to cluck one's tongue in wonder

Characters and words in 咄咄稱奇

(old)(interjection expressing disapproval, commiseration etc) tut! / Taiwan pr. [duo4]
to cluck one's tongue / tut-tut
to fit / balanced / suitable
to weigh / to state / to name / name / appellation / to praise

= + : Charlie Chaplin practices eating cereals blindfolded in front of the engine. As he is eating he wonders why the bowl is suddenly so heavy. The reason is that a peace dove sat down on the bowl and eats the cereals as well. The peace dove names Charlie Chaplin a real idiot because he doesn't notice.
variant of 秤[cheng4] / steelyard
odd (number)
strange / odd / weird / wonderful / surprisingly / unusually

= + : Mnemonic symbol: cappuccino (卡布奇诺)

The Queen of Hearts (qi) craves a cappuccino (奇) just inside the entrance of the space station (Ø2), and the robot (大) has one in his robot hands. He will give it to the Queen of Hearts under one weird (奇) condition: she shall prove that she's worth to receive the cappuccino by sitting on a bed of nails (可). The Queen agrees and pretends to be in much vain, but really she's just pretending since there is no gravity in the space station.

Words with 咄咄稱奇

咄咄稱奇 is not used as a component in another word.

Sentences with 咄咄稱奇

咄咄稱奇 currently does not appear in any sentence.