释义 |
Examples:congregate in one hall (idiom); to gather under one roof—too numerous mention individually or one by one—consider everyone else beneath one (idiom); so arrogant that no-one else matters—catch everything in one net (idiom); to eliminate at one stroke—there are no rivers one who has crossed the ocean, and no clouds to one who has passed Mount Wu [idiom.]—where there's a start, there's a finish (idiom); finish once one starts sth—engraved in one's heart and carved in one's bones (idiom); remember a benefactor as long as one lives—Jyutping, one of the many Cantonese romanization systems—one day's sun, ten days' frost (idiom, from Mencius); fig. work for a bit then skimp—Chakra (Sanskrit: disk), one of seven symbolic nodes of the body in spiritual Yoga—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "hol"), an ancient Korean writing system—the "human way", one of the stages in the cycle of reincarnation (Buddhism)—lit. cut all at one stroke (idiom); to impose uniformity—one falls, the next follows (idiom); stepping inthe breach to replace fallen comrades—lit. turn to any doctor one can find when critically ill (idiom); fig. to try anyone or anything in a crisis—Yao Wenyuan (1931-2005), one of the Gang of Four—One must live with the consequences of one's actions.—division on the abacus with a one-digit divisor—accomplishing something besides what one set out do—The net of justice is wide, but no-one escapes.—the appearance of a mountain, as if two pots were standing one upon the other—more than one can bear (idiom); at the end of one's patience—pervert (esp. one who gropes women in public)—modernization of science and technology, one of Deng Xiaoping's Four Modernizations—one country, two systems (PRC proposal regarding Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan)—close kindred slaughter one another (idiom); internecine strife—millimicron or one-millionth of a millimeter—Sumer (Šumer), one of the early civilizations of the Ancient Near East—Ferdinand Foch (1851-1929), leading French general and commander-in-chief of allied forces in the latter stages of World War One—(of an organisation) group of persons of one level or grade—not all gold is sufficiently red (idiom); no-one is perfect—hold up buttocks and praise a fart (idiom); to use flatter to get what one wants—the worse one's position, the harder one must fight back—lit. you cannot get fat with only one mouthful (proverb)—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—sb. with whom one has a close personal relationship—surreptiously substitute one thing for another [idiom.]—lit. the falling of one leaf heralds the coming of autumn [idiom.]—lit. one hand exchanges the cash, the other the goods [idiom.]— |