thơm lây

thơm lây

Anh trai tôi được khen ngợi, tôi cũng cảm thấy thơm lây.

Definition
  1. Idiomatic Phrase:
    • To bask in reflected glory; to enjoy a share of someone else's good reputation or success: The phrase describes the positive effect or enhanced social standing one experiences indirectly due to their close association with a successful, virtuous, or prestigious person. It implies receiving undeserved or secondary praise and honor.
Usage Examples
  • Idiomatic Phrase:
    • Anh trai tôi đoạt huy chương vàng, tôi cũng cảm thấy thơm lây. (My brother won a gold medal, and I also feel I bask in his reflected glory.)
    • Con cái thành đạt, cha mẹ thơm lây. (When children are successful, their parents share in the honor.)
    • ấy bạn thân của nhàđịch, nên cũng thơm lây trên báo chí. (She is the champion's close friend, so she also enjoys some of the limelight in the press.)
Advanced Usage
  • The phrase is often used in a humble or modest context, where the speaker acknowledges that the praise they receive is borrowed and not directly earned through their own actions.
  • It can carry a slight nuance of pleasant surprise or good fortune for being connected to someone admirable.
Variants and Related Words
  • Hưởng lây (v): To benefit indirectly (can be used for both positive and negative spillover effects).
    • Lỗi của anh ta khiến cả đội hưởng lây. (His mistake caused the whole team to suffer the consequences.)
Synonyms
  • To bask in reflected glory: To enjoy praise or honor that comes from association with another's achievements.
  • To share in the honor: To partake in the credit or prestige.
  • To ride on someone's coattails: To benefit from someone else's success (can have a more negative, opportunistic connotation than ).
Related Idioms
  • Một người làm quan, cả họ được nhờ: (When one person becomes a mandarin, the whole clan benefits.) A proverb expressing a similar concept of collective benefit from an individual's success.
  • Gần mực thì đen, gần đèn thì sáng: (Near ink, you get black; near a lamp, you become bright.) A proverb about being influenced by one's company, where the second part relates to the positive influence akin to .