释义 |
Examples:the Ming tombs (mausoleum park of the Ming emperors in Changping district of Beijing)—Taku Forts, maritime defense works in Tianjin dating back the Ming dynasty, playing a prominent role during the Opium Wars (1839-1860)—autumn exam (triennial provincial exam during Ming and Qing)—Jinpingmei or the Golden Lotus (1617), Ming dynasty vernacular novel, formerly notorious and banned for its sexual content—Ling Mengchu (1580-1644), Ming dynasty novelist and dramatist—Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), Jesuit missionary and translator in Ming China—Feng Doubo or Feng Wu (1672-), calligrapher of the Ming-Qing transition—Hualinbu, Ming dynasty theatrical troupe in Nanjing—Green standard army, standing infantry during Qing dynasty, originally formed from Ming and other Chinese army units—the early Ming (i.e. from second half of 14th century)—part of Heilongjiang and the Vladivostok area ruled by the Ming dynasty—Liang Chenyu (1521-1594), Ming dramatist of the Kunshan opera school—She Xiang (c. 1361-1396), lady who served as Yi ethnic group leader in Yunnan in early Ming times—xiaolian, two examination subjects in Han, later a single subject in Ming and Qing—official seal (esp. military seal during Qing and Ming times)—a hero with no chance of using his might—reign name of second Ming emperor, reigned 1398-1402, deposed in 1402 (mysterious disappearance is ongoing conspiracy theory)—Hai Rui (1514-1587), Ming politician, famous for honesty and integrity—If you can't do anything prevent it, you might as well sit back and enjoy it.—Li Yu (1611-c. 1680), late Ming and early Qing writer and dramatist—inspector-general of province in Ming and Qing times—Hubei and Hunan provinces (a Ming dynasty province)—fig. don't do anything that might arouse suspicion—supervisor of textiles (official post in Ming dynasty)—autumn trial (judicial hearing of capital cases during Ming and Qing)—Chen Renxi (1581-1636), late Ming scholar and prolific author—fight with all one's might—Zheng He (1371-1433), famous early Ming dynasty admiral and explorer—Li Zhi (1527-1602), late Ming philosopher, historian and writer—Ming and Qing dynasty province directly administered by Beijing, including Beijing, Tianjin, most of Hebei and Henan and part of Shandong—Wei Zhongxian (1568-1627), infamous eunuch politician of late Ming—form of writing novels that comprise lots of poetry in the body of the text, popular in the Ming Dynasty—you might as well (do it)—government-appointed hereditary tribal headman in the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties—Chien-Ming Wang (1980-), Taiwanese starting pitcher for the Washington Nationals in Major League Baseball—Li ZiCheng (1605-1645), leader of peasant rebellion at the end of the Ming Dynasty—Purple Mountain in suburbs of Nanjing, with Ming tombs and Sun Yat-sen's mausoleum—provincial imperial examination graduate who ranked 1st in metropolitan examination (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—Zhang Yi (1608-1695), prolific author and poet spanning interregnum between Ming and Qing—Yang Shouren (16th century), Ming dynasty scholar—Chongzhen, reign name of last Ming emperor (1628-1644)—prosperous country with military might—Ming dynasty record (1574) of exploration and foreign relations—Wang Ming (1904-1974), Soviet trained Chinese communist, Comintern and Soviet stooge and left adventurist in the 1930s, fell out with Mao and moved Soviet Union from 1956—contrary what one might expect— |