释义 |
Examples:the benevolent man cannot be rich and vice versa (idiom, from Mencius). It is easier for a camel go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19:24).—If one man holds the pass, ten thousand cannot pass (idiom); One man can hold the pass against ten thousand enemies—no poison, no great man (idiom); A great man has be ruthless.—man of Qǐ fears the sky falling (idiom); groundless fears—the old man lost his mare, but it all turned out for the best (idiom); fig. a blessing in disguise—It takes ten years nurture a tree, but a hundred years to train a man (idiom). A good education program takes a long time to develop.—a true man has the courage accept the consequences of his actions—listening the words of a wise man can be superior to studying ten years of books—Song Bai (936-1012), Northern Song literary man—one must be a man of his word and resolute in his work (proverb)—Ahmed Shah Massoud (1953-2001), Tajik Afghan engineer, military man and anti-Taleban leader—man (i.e. manly, masculine)—double happiness cakes, pastries offered by a man his fiancée's family at the time of their engagement—Zhou Bo (?-169 BC), military man and politician at the Qin-Han transition, a founding minister of Western Han—the old man moves mountains (idiom); fig. where there's a will, there's a way—able-bodied man (capable of fighting in a war)—grandpa (polite form of address for old man)—Raymond YIP Wai-Man, Hong Kong film director (debut as director: 1994)—(honorific written address younger man) My dear young friend—A famous teacher trains a fine student (idiom). A cultured man will have a deep influence on his successors.—rem (Röntgen equivalent man, an old unit of radiation damage now replaced by the Sievert)—Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir (1944-), Sudanese military man and politician, President of Sudan from 1989—men fear getting inthe wrong line of business, women fear marrying the wrong man (proverb)—a holy man who has left behind all earthly desires and concerns and attained nirvana (Buddhism)—Lao Ai (-238 BC), man of Qin famous for his giant penis—natural and man-made disasters (idiom); natural calamities (flood, drought, earthquake) added human calamity (fire, famine, war, Microsoft software)—uncle (term used address a man about the age of one's father)—lit. when a man achieves the Dao, his poultry and dogs rise Heaven [idiom.]—a horse cannot get fat without an extra ration, a man cannot get rich without an extra income [idiom.]—lit. the old man lost his horse, but it all turned out for the best [idiom.]—a man who is never content is like a snake trying swallow an elephant [idiom.]— |