释义 |
Examples:family with a literary reputation (idiom); literary family—touch base matter and turn it to gold (idiom); fig. to turn crude writing into a literary gem—lit. firebirds soar, phoenix gather (idiom); a distinguished literary group—colloquial (rather than literary) pronunciation of a Chinese character—martial arts chivalry (Chinese literary, theatrical and cinema genre)—literary or artistic talent—early Tang literary style despised as shallow by the classicists—hang on to and serve the rich and powerful by literary hack work etc—decorate one's speech or writing with literary allusions—(literary) beauty (usually of a maid or concubine)—(literary) be a good match—Chinese literary work not included in official classics—literary (rather than colloquial) pronunciation of a Chinese character—literary name (an alternative name of person stressing a moral principle)—(literary) tremble with fear—(literary) remonstrate with one's superior tactfully—be all the same way (literary)—(literary) I trust you have been well since we last met—China Federation of Literary and Art Circles (CFLAC)—Song and Yuan literary form based on vernacular folk stories—literary auxiliary particle, comes at the beginning of a sentence—literary or theatrical form in Tang, Song and Yuan—short, simple literary or artistic creation—classical Chinese as a literary model, esp. in Tang and Song prose—Mandarin ducks and butterfly (i.e. love birds) literary school around 1900, criticized as populist and romantic by socialist realists—(literary pronunciation, still advocated in Taiwan) rule—literary quotation or allusion—celebrity, esp. distinguished literary person having no official post—(literary) be promoted more than one grade or rank at a time—source (esp. of quotation or literary allusion)—Wang Yucheng (954-1001) Song dynasty literary figure—rare, literary classifier for a large body of clear water—a literary masterpiece or sb of extraordinary talent [idiom.]— |