释义 |
Examples:one of the 28 constellations of Chinese astronomy—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "ra"), an ancient Korean writing system—one of the characters used in kwukyel, an ancient Korean writing system—Basay, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—Kavalan, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—Chakra (Sanskrit: disk), one of seven symbolic nodes of the body in spiritual Yoga—reckoned be first or second best (idiom); one of the very best—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "hol"), an ancient Korean writing system—Horse-Face, one of the two guardians of the underworld in Chinese mythology—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "keum"), an ancient Korean writing system—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "teul"), an ancient Korean writing system—book of the same name, one of the classics of Confucianism—only remaining of the great (idiom); one of the few greats extant—Jing, one of the 28 constellations of Chinese astronomy—Penglai, one of three fabled islands in Eastern sea, abode of immortals—Örkesh Dölet (1968-), one of the main leaders of the Beijing student democracy movement of 1989—posthumous or ghost marriage (in which at least one of the bride and groom is dead)—Battle of Stalingrad (1942-1943), decisive battle of Second World War and one of the bloodiest battles in history, when the Germans failed take Stalingrad, were then trapped and destroyed by Soviet forces—Hanyu Da Zidian, one of the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionaries with 54,678 (and later 60,370) entries, first published between 1986-1990—Atayal or Tayal, one of the indigenous ethnic groups of Taiwan—Saisiyat or Saisiat, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—Huangting Jing, one of the primary scriptures of Daoism—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "eo" or "sya"), an ancient Korean writing system—Wang Li (1900-1986), one of the pioneers of modern Chinese linguistics—Xuantu commandery (108 BC-c. 300 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—Natsume Sōseki (1867-1916), one of the first modern Japanese novelist—be born in the year of (one of the 12 animals)—volume (one of a series)—one of the 64 trigrams of the Book of Changes—Papora or Papura, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—Aladdin, character in one of the tales in the The Book of One Thousand and One Nights—Paekche or Baekje (18 BC-660 AD), one of the Korean Three Kingdoms—Dhritarashtra (one of the Four Heavenly Kings)—Sun Chuanfang (1885-1935) one of the northern warlord, murdered in Tianjin in 1935—Guanting or Kuan-ting reservoir in Hebei, one of the main water reservoirs serving Beijing—the Baima or White horse temple in Luoyang, one of the earliest Buddhist temples in China—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "myeon"), an ancient Korean writing system—orphaned of all one's immediate relatives (idiom); no one rely on—one of the four tones of Middle Chinese—Wang Dan (1969-), Chinese dissident, one of the leaders of the Beijing student democracy movement of 1989—Pazeh, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—Sumatra (one of the Indonesian islands)—the prestige of another person, which one borrows for oneself—lit. reins together and carriages level (idiom); keeping exactly abreast of one another—produce clouds with one turn of the hand and rain with another (idiom); fig. to shift one's ground—lit. ruin the enterprise for the sake of one basketful—lit. know one and understand half (idiom); a smattering of knowledge—kopeck (unit of money, one hundredth of ruble) (loanword)—Artem Ivanovich Mikoyan (1905-1970), brother of the politician and one designer of MiG military aircraft—sth of dubious worth that one is reluctant give up—micron (one thousandth of a millimeter or 10^-6 meter)—lit. the falling of one leaf heralds the coming of autumn [idiom.]— |