The Pot Calls the Kettle
The pot calls the kettle black.
the pot calls the kettle black
Why English wisdom catches the pot calling the kettle black — and how Spanish, Arabic, and Mandarin name the same hypocrisy with very different teeth.
A theme across cultures
Hypocrisy is the gap between the face shown to the household and the face shown to the world. Proverbs catch it with affection more often than scorn — most cultures have noticed that humans cannot help being slightly different in front of their mothers than in front of their bosses.
The Mongolian gertee bar, gadaa khulgana — “a tiger at home, a mouse outside” — turns the observation upside down: the same person is one creature inside the door, another outside it. The image stays with you long after the proverb itself does.
The pot calls the kettle black.
the pot calls the kettle black
Why English wisdom catches the pot calling the kettle black — and how Spanish, Arabic, and Mandarin name the same hypocrisy with very different teeth.
Гэртээ бар, гадаа хулгана
gertee bar, gadaa khulgana
Why Mongolians call a household bully a tiger at home and a mouse outside — and how Japanese, Mandarin, and Russian circle the same domestic ugliness from very different angles.