释义 |
Examples:stick one leg over the other (when sitting)—compression fault, where one block pushes over the other at dip of less than 45 degrees—run wildly all over the place—stress the incidental over the fundamental—lit. climb over the wall—failed and wiped over the floor (idiom); fail utterly—lit. the birds are over, the bow is put away (idiom); fig. get rid of sb once he has served his purpose—quaternary (geological period covering the recent ice ages over the last 180,000 years)—lit. go beyond the sacrificial altar and take over the kitchen (idiom); fig. to exceed one's place and meddle in other people's affairs—be over the accepted norm—The Sun Shines over the Sanggan River, proletarian novel by Ding Ling, winner of 1951 Stalin prize—one leg over the other (legs crossed)—beaten and wiped over the floor (idiom); fail utterly—Yi Sunshin (1545-1598), Korean admiral and folk hero, famous for sea victories over the Japanese invaders—bitterness finishes, sweetness begins (idiom); the hard times are over, the good times just beginning—hand over the money to cover sth—National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations, a computerized data system provide brokers with price quotations for securities traded over the counter—go over the head of one's boss—formidable renown gives one authority over the whole country—war of 1920 between Northern Warlords, in which the Zhili faction beat the Anhui faction and took over the Beijing government—scattered about like stars in the sky or chess pieces on a board (idiom); spread all over the place—lit. the red apricot tree leans over the garden wall—refers the Communists' victory over the Nationalists in 1949—the sky hangs low over the Yangtze, empty as far as the eye can see (idiom); nothing see to the broad horizon—El Niño effect, equatorial climatic variation over the Pacific Ocean—consider past cause and future effect (idiom); to think over the past and future—speak with others over the Internet—a cornered dog will jump over the wall [idiom.]—location on wrist over the radial artery where pulse is taken in TCM—fret over the worries of long-departed people (idiom); to worry unnecessarily—pass over mountains ridges (idiom); fig. hardships of the journey—the sun sets over western hills (idiom); the day approaches its end—used with negatives: the task is far from over— |