释义 |
Examples:(live together until the) white hairs of old age (idiom); to live to a ripe old age in conjugal bliss—Luoyang prefecture level city in Henan, an old capital from pre-Han times—first of the five night watch periods 19:00-21:00 (old)—review the old and know the new (idiom, from the Analects)—(old) shoes made of woven grass, padded with feathers—old habits are hard change (idiom); It is hard to throw off ingrained habits.—old form of London, capital of United Kingdom—interesting and appealing (of old locations, objects etc)—casting a couple's fortune based on their bithdates (old)—bound set of bamboo slips used for record keeping (old)—ranking system used in the Imperial examinations (old)—old Chinese name for Calicut, town on Arabian sea in Kerala, India—Lu Rongting (1858-1928), provincial governor of Guangxi under the Qing, subsequently leader of old Guangxi warlord faction—old: reap the consequences of one's words (idiom, from Mencius); modern: to go back on one's word—shaking the old and illuminating the new (idiom); surpassing the ancients and dazzling contemporaries—use old friends to climb socially (idiom); to suck up to sb—white hair and gray sunken cheeks (idiom); decrepit old age—change an emperor's or ruler's reign title (old)—old property (esp. inherited from former generation)—(old) young fellow (term of address used by the older generation)—request permission to resign from an official position (old)—(old) child, particularly referring the son who resembles his father—Asakusa, district of Tokyo with an atmosphere of old Japan, famous for the 7th century Buddhist temple, Sensō-ji—old fashioned square table seat eight people—different broth but the same old medicine (idiom); a change in name only—discard the old and introduce the new (idiom); to innovate—weary old body (colloquial term, used jocularly or irreverently)— |