చాకిరేవు ఒకచోట, ఏలపాట ఇంకొకచోట

chakirevu okachota, elapata inkokachota

Translation

The washing ghat is in one place, while the work song is in another.

Meaning

This proverb is used to describe a situation where there is a lack of coordination or a total disconnect between two related things. It refers to someone doing something completely irrelevant to the task at hand or being out of sync with the environment and purpose.

Related Phrases

Wealth in one place, and distrust in another place.

This proverb describes a situation where a person entrusts their money or valuables to someone but continues to be suspicious of them. It is used to highlight the irony of relying on someone for a task while simultaneously lacking faith in their integrity or the safety of the arrangement.

A person with termites in their legs will not stand in one place for even a moment.

This expression refers to a person who is extremely restless, fidgety, or constantly moving from one place to another. It is used to describe someone who lacks the patience to sit still or someone who is always on the go without a specific purpose.

Will a fox howl in one place and sing the wedding song of Goddess Gauri in another?

This expression is used to point out that an individual's core nature or character does not change based on the situation or location. Just as a fox is inherently wired to howl and cannot suddenly produce sacred music, a person with bad intentions or a specific habit will behave consistently wherever they go. It is often used to express skepticism about someone's sudden change in behavior or to highlight hypocrisy.

Marriage at one place, heart at another place.

This expression is used to describe a situation where someone's formal commitments or physical presence are in one place, while their desires or thoughts are focused somewhere else. It is often used to refer to people who are physically present but mentally or emotionally preoccupied with something or someone else.

All stones in one place, all gems in one place.

This expression is used to describe a situation where things or people are organized and categorized by quality or merit. It suggests that excellence is separated from the ordinary, or that like-minded/similar-status individuals naturally group together.

The whistle is in one place, and the washerman's ghat is in another.

This proverb is used to describe a situation where there is a complete lack of coordination or connection between two related things. It refers to someone who acts or talks irrelevantly to the context, or when the effort and the result are completely disconnected.

The wound is in one place, while the medicine is applied in another.

This proverb is used to describe a situation where the solution being applied does not address the actual root cause of a problem. It signifies a mismatch between a problem and its remedy, or an irrelevant action taken to solve an issue.

All the honey is in one place, while the honeycomb is in another place.

This expression describes a state of total disorder, lack of coordination, or a situation where things are scattered and not where they belong. It is used when the essence or value of something (the honey) is separated from its structure or source (the comb), leading to chaos or inefficiency.

An efficient man supposedly woke up very early, swept the floor, sprinkled water, and then went back to sleep somewhere else.

This is a sarcastic Telugu proverb used to mock someone who pretends to be hardworking or efficient but actually achieves nothing productive. It describes a person who performs the preliminary setup or minor chores with great showmanship, only to abandon the main task or go back to being lazy immediately after.

All the honey is in one place, while the entire honeycomb is in another place.

This expression describes a situation where resources, people, or components that belong together are completely separated or disorganized. It is used to point out a lack of coordination or a mismatch where the essence of something is disconnected from its structure.