释义 |
Examples:short and lined coat or robe—a narrow street (lined with walls)—(of a road) be tree-lined—Lin Zexu or Lin Tse-hsu "Commissioner Lin" (1785-1850), Qing official whose anti-opium activities led first Opium war with Britain 1840-1842—broken line (continuous figure made up of straight line segments)—lined up close (like teeth of a comb)—Zhang Zhixin (1930-1975) female revolutionary and martyr, who followed the true Marxist-Leninist line as a party member, and was arrested in 1969, murdered in 1975 after opposing the counter-revolutionary party-usurping conspiracies of Lin Biao and the Gang of Four, and only rehabilitated posthumously in 1979—carpenter's straight line marker (an inked cord stretched tight then lowered ontimber)—Lin Chong, one of the Heroes of the Marsh in Water Margin—Qianmen subway station on Beijing Subway Line 2—poetic form consisting of four lines of five syllables, with rhymes on first, second and fourth line—Lin Hwai-Min (1947-), Taiwanese choreographer and dancer—candidate who came second in the Han-lin examination—Jeremy Lin (1988-), Taiwanese-American professional basketball player (NBA)—Lin Chia-Chiao (1916-), Chinese-American physicist, astronomer and applied mathematician—Lin Feng-cheng (Taiwan Minister of the Interior)—Brigitte Lin (Taiwan actress, 1954-)—third and fourth lines (in an eight-line poem) which form a couplet—outer alternate angles (where one line meets two parallel lines)—alternate angles (where one line meets two parallel lines)—Lin Bu (967-1028), Northern Song poet—candidate who came third in the Han-lin examination—Lin Shu (1852-1924), writer and influential translator and adaptor of vast swathes of Western literature inclassical Chinese—(idiom) teach in line with the student's ability—Lin'an county in Zhejiang, west of Hangzhou—Lin Sen (1868-1943), revolutionary politician, colleague of Sun Yat-sen, chairman of the Chinese nationalist government (1928-1932)—Ruby Lin (1976-), Taiwanese actress and pop singer—Lin Biao (1908-1971), Chinese army leader at time of the Cultural Revolution—classifier for works of literature, films, cars or land line telephones— |