Break a leg
Meaning: A way of wishing someone good luck before a performance, especially in theater.
In theater, saying 'good luck' is considered bad luck, so performers say 'break a leg' instead. The phrase has spread beyond theater to any situation where you want to wish someone well before they perform, present, or face a challenge.
Examples
- Break a leg out there tonight! 今晚上台加油啊!¡Mucha mierda esta noche!今夜のステージ、頑張ってね!오늘 밤 무대에서 잘해! (Break a leg!)
- She told me to break a leg before my job interview. 面试之前她跟我说了一句'break a leg'。Me deseó mucha suerte antes de mi entrevista de trabajo.就職面接の前に彼女が「break a leg」って言ってくれた。면접 보기 전에 그녀가 break a leg이라고 해줬어.
- The whole cast told each other to break a leg before the curtain went up. 幕布升起之前,全体演员互相说着'break a leg'。Todo el elenco se deseó suerte antes de que se levantara el telón.幕が上がる前にキャスト全員が互いに「break a leg」と声をかけ合った。막이 오르기 전에 캐스트 전원이 서로에게 break a leg이라고 말했다.
Pronunciation
Usage Guide
Context: theater, performances, job interviews, exams
Tone: encouraging, supportive
✓ Do Say
- Break a leg!Break a leg!加油!¡Mucha mierda!Break a leg!(頑張って!)Break a leg! (행운을 빌어!)
- Go break a leg out there.上台加油,break a leg!Sal ahí y rómpela.Go break a leg out there.(行って頑張ってこい。)Go break a leg out there. (가서 잘 해와.)
✗ Don't Say
- Don't say 'good luck' in theater — it's considered bad luck. 'Break a leg' is the tradition在剧场里不要说'good luck'——这被认为会带来厄运。说'break a leg'才是传统En el teatro no digas 'buena suerte' — se considera de mal agüero. Lo tradicional es decir 'break a leg' o '¡mucha mierda!'演劇の場では「good luck」と言わないこと——縁起が悪いとされている。「Break a leg」が伝統的な言い方연극계에서는 'good luck'이라고 말하지 말 것 — 불운으로 여겨진다. 'Break a leg'이 전통이다
Origin & History
The origin is debated. Theories include: bending a leg in a bow (from audience approval), breaking through the 'leg' (side curtain) to perform an encore, or simply a superstitious inversion of wishing bad luck to avoid tempting fate.
Cultural Context
Era: Early 20th century
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
More From This Topic
More from Music & Entertainment
Flashcards, quizzes, audio pronunciation & spaced repetition — all free