释义 |
Examples:Kang Youwei (1858-1927), Confucian intellectual, educator and would-be reformer, main leader of the failed reform movement of 1898—kang (a heatable brick bed)—King Xuan, eleventh King of Zhou, reigned (828-782 BC)—King Wu of Zhou, personal name Ji Fa, reigned 1046-1043 BC as first king of Western Zhou dynasty 1046-1043 BC—Kang Sheng (1896-1975), Chinese communist leader, a politburo member during the Cultural Revolution and posthumously blamed for some of its excesses—Kang, one of the 28 constellations—booming and golden age of Qing dynasty (from Kang Xi Qian Long emperors)—King Mu, fifth king of Zhou, said have lived to 105 and reigned 976-922 BC or 1001-947 BC, rich in associated mythology—Asa (?-870 BC), third king of Judah and fifth king of the House of David (Judaism)—Du Kang, legendary inventor of wine—King Helu of Wu (-496 BC, reigned 514-496 BC)—Bhumibol Adulyadej (1927-), King of Thailand (reigned 1945-)—Chakravarti raja (Sanskrit: King of Kings)—King Taejong of Joseon Korea (1367-1422), reigned 1400-1418—commander-in-chief, the equivalent of king in Chinese chess—Charlemagne (c. 747-c. 814), King of the Franks, Holy Roman Emperor from 800—palace of the Dragon King at the bottom of the Eastern Sea—capital city of King Helu of Wu from 6th century BC, at modern Wuxi, Jiangsu—ruins of capital city of King Helu of Wu, from 6th century BC, at modern Wuxi, Jiangsu—Cassandra, daughter of king Priam in Greek mythology—Yi Seong-gye (1335-1408), founder and first king of Korean Yi dynasty (1392-1910)—Richard the Lionheart (1157-1199), King Richard I of England 1189-1199—the king looked left and right and then talked of other things—the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea (mythology)—Bhumibol (b.Dec 5th 1927. King of Thailand since June 9th 1946)—Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968), American clergyman and civil rights activist—Henry V (1387-1422), English warrior king, victor of Agincourt—in fiction, bogus eunuch and the consort of king Ying Zheng's mother lady Zhao—shrimp soldiers and crab generals (in mythology or popular fiction, the army of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea)—Josiah or Yoshiyahu (649-609 BC), a king of Judah (Judaism)—ferocious mythological animal, the fifth son of the dragon king—Sophocles (496-406 BC), Greek tragedian, author of Oedipus the King—the tomb of Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo or Songzain Gambo in Lhoka prefecture—King Jie, the final ruler of the Xia dynasty (until c. 1600 BC), a notoriously cruel and immoral tyrant—rook sacrifice save the king (in Chinese chess); fig. to protect a senior figure by blaming an underling—(Prince) Ranariddh (son of King Sihanouk of Cambodia)—feudal term of praise for ruler, king or emperor—King Gesar, hero of a Tibetan and Mongolian epic cycle—Jeonjo (1752-1800), 22nd king of Korean Joseon dynasty—Oedipus, legendary king of Thebes who killed his father and married his mother— |