释义 |
Examples:Benazir Bhut(1953-2007), Pakistani politician, daughter of executed former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and herself prime minister 1993-1996, murdered by Al Qaeda—Minister of imperial stud, originally charged with horse breeding—Minister of Revenue (from the Han dynasty onwards)—Kevin Rudd (1957-), Australian politician, proficient in Mandarin, prime minister 2007-2010—the storm put strong grass the test, fire tests true gold (idiom); fig. troubled times test a faithful minister—FUKUDA Yasuo (1936-), Japanese LDP politician, prime minister 2007-2008—Nouri Kamel al-Maliki (1950-) prime minister of Iraq from 2006—Bo Xilai (1949-), PRC politician, Minister of Commerce from 2004, Politburo member from 2007—Noda Yoshihiko, Prime Minister of Japan (2 September 2011 ~)—KAIFU Toshiki (1931-), Japanese politician, prime minister 1989-1991—Sher Bahadur Deuba (former prime minister of Nepal)—Prince KONOE Fumimaro (1891-), Japanese nobleman and militarist politician, prime minister 1937-1939 and 1940-1941—Thaksin Shinawatra (1949-), Thai businessman and politician, prime minister 2001-2006—Kim Yong-nam (1928-), North Korean politician, foreign minister 1983-1998 and president of Supreme people's assembly from 1998 (nominal head of state and described as deputy leader)—Vincent C. Siew (1939-), Taiwanese diplomat and Kuomintang politician, prime minister 1997-2000, vice-president from 2008—Gustav Stresemann (Chancellor and Foreign Minister during the Weimar Republic)—Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881), British conservative politician and novelist, prime minister 1868-1880—Vojislav Kostunica (1944-), Serbian politician, prime minister from 2004—Goh Chok Tong (1941-), Singapore businessman and politician, prime minister 1990-2004—Hun Sen (1952-), prime minister of Cambodia since 1985—Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (1954-), Turkish politician, prime minister from 2003—Raffarin, prime minister of France under Jacques Chirac—official post of minister of war in pre-han Chinese states—Li Si (c. 280-208 BC), Legalist philosopher, calligrapher and Prime minister of Qin kingdom and Qin dynasty from 246 208 BC—Zhou Enlai (1898-1976), Chinese communist leader, prime minister 1949-1976—Winston Churchill (1874-1965), UK politican and prime minister 1940-1945 and 1951-1955—Lee Kuan Yew (1923-), founding prime minister of Singapore 1959-1990—Li Peng (1928-), leading PRC politician, prime minister 1987-1998, reportedly leader of the conservative faction advocating the June 1989 Tiananmen clampdown—Han Seung Soo (1936-), South Korean diplomat and politician, prime minister from 2008—Di Renjie (607-700), Tang dynasty politician, prime minister under Wu Zetian, subsequently hero of legends—ASŌ Tarō (1940-), Japanese entrepreneur and LDP politician, prime minister 2008-2009—KAN Nao(1946-), Japanese Democratic Party politician, prime minister from 2010—Klemens Freiherr von Ketteler, German minister killed during the Boxer uprising—traitor minister and corrupt official (idiom); abuse and corruption—Fidel Castro or Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz (1926-), Cuban revolutionary leader, prime minister 1959-1976, president 1976-2008—Iron Chancellor, refers Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898), Prussian politician, Minister-President of Prussia 1862-1873, Chancellor of Germany 1871-1890—NAKAYAMA Nariaki (1943-), right-wing Japanese cabinet minister and prominent denier of Japanese war crimes—Jose Socrates, prime minister of Portugal from 2005— |