释义 |
Examples:lit. one strong beat and one weak beats in a measure of music (two beats in the bar) (idiom); fig. follow a prescribed pattern the letter—fig. trends (esp. unpredictable ones)—curb (ones' mirth, arrogance etc)—same road out, different ones back—wear ones' shoes babouche-style—turn big problems into small ones, and small problems into no problems at all—keep silent about major charges while admitting minor ones—If one is industrious, one will not be in want. [idiom.]—good men are discarded in favor of bombastic ones [idiom.]—minor issues eclipse major ones [idiom.]—where there's a start, there's a finish (idiom); finish once one starts sth—Tao or Yami, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—engraved in one's heart and carved in one's bones (idiom); remember a benefactor as long as one lives—one of the characters used in kwukyel, an ancient Korean writing system—one full year (e.g. on child's first birthday)—the "human way", one of the stages in the cycle of reincarnation (Buddhism)—fig. things do not always turn out as one would expect—one of the characters used in kwukyel (phonetic "teul"), an ancient Korean writing system—Jing, one of the 28 constellations of Chinese astronomy—focus attention on one phrase without regard to the meaning of the whole piece—the seat of the Law, on which the one who explains the doctrine is seated (Buddhism)—division on the abacus with a one-digit divisor—fig. one should not go back one's past experiences (of love, job etc)—allele (one of two paired gene in diploid organism)—produce clouds with one turn of the hand and rain with another (idiom); fig. to shift one's ground—virtue has its rewards (idiom); one good turn deserves another—give up one's wrong way of life and turn to a better one—more than one can bear (idiom); at the end of one's patience—approach one's coffin (idiom); with one foot in the grave—Friedrich Engels (1820-1895), socialist philosopher and one of the founder of Marxism—(in former times) what one is allowed wear depending on social status—stars (that one sees from blow the head etc)—open the net on one side (idiom); let the caged bird fly—alternate angles (where one line meets two parallel lines)—Qauqaut, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—one of the two latitude lines, Tropic of Capricorn or Tropic of Cancer—Thao, one of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan—lit. one day, a thousand miles (idiom); rapid progress—if two tigers fight, one must get injured (idiom); if you start a war, someone is bound get hurt—(placed between two numbers indicate a smaller quantity followed by a larger one)—Zhao, one of the seven states during the Warring States Period of Chinese history (475-220 BC)—unit of distance equal one-thirtieth km or 33.33 meters—hold up buttocks and praise a fart (idiom); to use flatter to get what one wants—one of the seven planets of pre-modern astronomy—He who comes is surely ill-intentioned, no-one well-meaning will come (idiom).—semitendinosus, one of the hamstring muscles in the thigh—things turn out contrary the way one wishes [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— |