释义 |
Examples:hide dirt, to conceal corruption (idiom); to shelter evil people and accept wrongdoing—tyrant and oppressor of the people (idiom); traitorous dictator—console the people and punish the tyrant—(used in names of people and shops, symbolizing prosperity)—genuine people and true events—issue and deliver (to people)—bad people and good people do not mix—Dravidian (general term for South Indian people and languages)—harm people and damage property [idiom.]—enrage people and make matters worse—long-lived people, rich harvests (idiom); stable and affluent society—the Franks (Germanic people who arrived in Europe from 600 AD and took over France)—Songhay people of Mali and the Sahara—boat-dwelling people of Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian provinces (old)—people of all trades and professions—party officials and ordinary people—efficient government, people at peace (idiom); all is well with the state and the people—the imperial court and the ordinary people—people who live and make a living on boats—a clash between the police and the people—root out the strong and give people peace (idiom); to rob the rich and give to the poor—Ordos, region of Inner Mongolia administered as a prefecture-level city, and a people of the region—fig. provoke and offend people—middle-aged and elderly people—the country prospers, the people at peace (idiom); peace and prosperity—the police and the people (usually in opposition)—favorable geographical and social conditions (idiom); good location and the people satisfied—tax by force and extort levies (idiom); to screw taxes out of the people by force—lit. like the new, and hate the old (idiom); fig. enamored with new people (e.g. new girlfriend), bored with the old—Descendants of the Fiery Emperor and Yellow Emperor (i.e. Han Chinese people)—lit. the fat and wealth of the people (idiom); the nation's hard-won wealth (esp. as an object of unscrupulous exploitation)—lit. people rebelling and friends deserting [idiom.]—can be enjoyed by scholars and lay-people alike [idiom.]—treat people according to their rank and one's relationship with them [idiom.]—damage the people and harm the country [idiom.]—the country ruined and the people starving [idiom.]—rob the state and hurt the people [idiom.]—revere people of virtue and honor scholarship [idiom.]—the country weakened and the people empoverished [idiom.]—there is a wide gap between the nobility and the common people [idiom.]— |