释义 |
Examples:the Book of Dao by Laozi or Lao-Tze, the sacred text of Daoism—recording of a person reading the text of a book—can bow and submit, or can stand tall (idiom, from Book of Changes); ready give and take—"Collection of the Most Important Military Techniques", book published in 1044 during the Northern Song Dynasty—book of the same name, one of the classics of Confucianism—trip forwards or stumble back (idiom, from Book of Songs); can't get anything right—one of the 64 hexagrams of the Book of Changes—Book of Amos, one of the books of the Nevi'im and of the Christian Old Testament—(old) book (made of bamboo strips tied together)—Chu Ci, the Songs of Chu (ancient book of poems, collected during Han but esp. from country of Chu c. 500 BC)—final remarks (at the end of a book or article)—one of the 64 trigrams of the Book of Changes—Guanzi, classical book containing writings of Guan Zhong and his school—man and wife fall out (idiom, from Book of Changes); marital strife—make day as night (idiom, from Book of Songs); fig. to prolong one's pleasure regardless of the hour— |