释义 |
Examples:surge up (of acid in the stomach)—bank up the roots of plants—hold up the hem of clothes—(of a meeting etc) break up in discord—give up one's wrong way of life and turn to a better one—from the beginning of ... up ...—come up out of the ground—line-up (of a sports team etc)—surge up violently (of ocean, river, lake etc)—Chinese set expression, often made up of 4 characters or two couplets of 4 characters each, often alluding a story or historical quotation—have the ears of grain come up—the “Four Clean-ups” Movement (1963-66), a nationwide movement clean things up in the fields of politics, economy, organization and ideology (historical)—(of children) play up in front of guests—thawing and opening up of frozen river in spring—crow foot (system of ropes through tackle hold up an awning)—broken line (continuous figure made up of straight line segments)—elegant, almond-shaped eyes with the inner canthus pointing down and the outer canthus up, like the eye of a phoenix—add up a number of items—Huan Xuan (369-404), general involved in the break-up of Eastern Jin—go back to sleep (instead of rising up in the morning)—clear up (of weather after rain)—pre-Qin, Chinese history up the foundation of the Qin imperial dynasty in 221 BC—(fig.) banquet set up with the aim of murdering a guest—lit. on the beat, move apart; fig. break-up (of marriage or business partners)—Chinese word made up of three or more characters—make up a prescription (of herbal medicine)—get up on hind legs (esp. of horse)—Cai Dongfan (1877-1945), historian, author of popular general history texts up until his own time—Serbia and Montenegro (after break-up of Yugoslavia in 1992)—make up (out of components)—vascular (made up of vessels)—North China Incident of October-December 1935, a Japanese attempt set up a puppet government in north China—all sorts of feelings well up in one's heart—peptide chain (chain of amino acids making up protein)—writing up of official or judicial documents—(of a bird) puff up (one's feathers)—walk slowly up a flight of steps [idiom.]— |