释义 |
Examples:engraved in one's heart and carved in one's bones (idiom); remember a benefactor as long as one lives—lit. sth hits one in the face—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "hol"), an ancient Korean writing system—congregate in one hall (idiom); to gather under one roof—number one in the country—regarding oneself as number one in terms of leadership, seniority or status—be the one in charge of the family—fight in one place after another—swallow in one gulp [idiom.]—in one ear and out the other—get there in one step (idiom); easily done—Chakra (Sanskrit: disk), one of seven symbolic nodes of the body in spiritual Yoga—the "human way", one of the stages in the cycle of reincarnation (Buddhism)—lit. turn to any doctor one can find when critically ill (idiom); fig. to try anyone or anything in a crisis—solely engrossed in one thing—green sea, blue sky (idiom); sea and sky merge in one shade—bitten by a snake in one year, fears the well rope for ten years (idiom); once bitten twice shy—pervert (esp. one who gropes women in public)—theist (believer in one or more Deities)—Aladdin, character in one of the tales in the The Book of One Thousand and One Nights—lit. hair and beard all in one stroke—Ferdinand Foch (1851-1929), leading French general and commander-in-chief of allied forces in the latter stages of World War One—rise and fall of stock in one day's trading—catch everything in one net (idiom); to eliminate at one stroke—water and sky merge in one color [idiom.]—lit. drop a thousand zhang in one fall [idiom.]—classifier for long, narrow, flexible objects such as fish, dogs, pants; for roads and rivers; for human lives; in the expression: one heart, meaning working together for a common goal—all things tend in one direction [idiom.]— |