释义 |
Examples:echo one another [idiom.]—complementing one another—help one another in difficulty—take over (from one another)—officials shield one another (idiom); a cover-up—whisper sweet nothings to one another—treat one another with absolute sincerity (idiom); to show total devotion—lit. reins together and carriages level (idiom); keeping exactly abreast of one another—as close as one's hands and feet (idiom); loving one another as brothers—lit. river water does not interfere with well water (idiom); Do not interfere with one another.—massacre one another (idiom); internecine strife—keep watch and defend one another (idiom, from Mencius); to join forces to defend against external aggressors—butchering one another as fish and flesh (idiom); killing one another—agreeing with one another—on good terms with one another—sympathize with one another—close kindred slaughter one another (idiom); internecine strife—lying fallen over one another—mutually dependent for life (idiom); rely upon one another for survival—lit. short-weaponed soldiery fight one another (idiom); fierce hand-to-hand infantry combat—striving be first and fearing to be last (idiom); outdoing one another—fault line where the two sides slide horizontally past one another—kneel and kowtow to one another—be kind and love one another (idiom); bound by deep emotions—scholars tend disparage one another [idiom.]—light as a goose feather, heavy as Mt Tai (idiom); of no consequence one person, a matter of life or death to another—beat a tiger from the front door, only to have a wolf come in at the back (idiom); fig. facing one problem after another—Hot money, money flowing from one currency another in the hope of quick profit—produce clouds with one turn of the hand and rain with another (idiom); fig. to shift one's ground—confuse one thing with another (idiom); to muddle—there cannot be another one like it—quit one's job (without having another one)—mostly colloquial classifier for number of times of movement from one place to another; things arranged in a row.—surreptiously substitute one thing for another [idiom.]—colloquial classifier for number of times of movement from one place to another or number of turns, times, occasions.— |