释义 |
Examples:Standing Committee of the National People's Congress—CPPCC (Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference)—understanding people's views (idiom); fair and considerate—name of the flag of the People's Republic of China—Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani (1952-), Pakistan people's party politician, prime minister from 2008—lit. take joy in calamity and delight in disaster (idiom); fig. to rejoice in other people's misfortune—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—parrot other people's words (idiom); to chime in with others—People's Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea)—People's Action Party (ruling party in Singapore)—clothing, food, housing and transport (idiom); people's basic needs—the Chinese People's Volunteer Army deployed by China aid North Korea in 1950—Abdulahat Abdurixit (1942-), PRC engineer and politician, chairman of Xinjiang autonomous region 1994-2003, in 2003 vice-chair of 10th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference—People's Republic of Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan)—Nambaryn Enkhbayar (1958-), Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party politician, President of Mongolia 2005-2009—PRC Supreme People's Procuratorate (prosecutor's office)—sex demon (a spirit that enters people's souls and makes them desire sex)—make one's hair stand up in anger (idiom); to raise people's hackles—Monument the People's Heroes, at Tiananmen Square—Zhang Xueliang (1901-2001) son of Fengtian clique warlord, then senior general for the Nationalists and subsequently for the People's Liberation Army—Food is the God of the people. (idiom); People view food as the primary need.—Asif Ali Zardari (1956-), Pakistani People's Party politician, widower of murdered Benazir Bhutto, president of Pakistan from 2008—National People's Congress and Chinese People's Political Consultative Congress—the people's livelihood is reduced destitution (idiom); a time of famine and impoverishment—Khorloogiin Choibalsan (1895-1952), Communist leader of the Mongolian People's Republic (mid-1930s-1952)—ravenous wolves hold the road (idiom); wicked people in power—lit. order people by pointing the chin (idiom); to signal orders by facial gesture—May 7 Cadre School (forcing educated people inre-education and peasant labor during Cultural Revolution)—tyrant and oppressor of the people (idiom); traitorous dictator—gentleman aspiring benevolence (idiom); people with lofty ideals—Sixteen Kingdoms of five non-Han people (ruling most of China 304-439)—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)—gypsy (may refer Roma people, or to Bohemian lifestyle)—world with only two people (usually refers a romantic couple)—root out the strong and give people peace (idiom); to rob the rich and give to the poor—On the correct handling of internal contradictions among the people, Mao Zedong's tract of 1957—high versus low social hierarchy of ruler people, father to son, husband to wife in Confucianism—the police and the people (usually in opposition)—collecting together (of distinguished people or exquisite objects)—bow around with hands joined (to people on all sides)—housekeeper who looks after old people with no children or whose children do not live with them—(of a group of people) live scattered over an area—believe what one sees, not what one hears (idiom). Don't believe what people tell you until you see if for yourself.—frightening words scare people (idiom); alarmist talk—classifier for sets, series, groups of people, batteries—black dwarf (pejorative term for non-Han people)—abler people do more work (idiom); It is because you are so capable that we (or they) leave everything you.—(in Taiwan) Han Chinese people other than those who moved Taiwan from mainland China after 1945 and their descendants—classifier for people working in the same domain—classifier for groups of people, herds of animals, flocks of birds, schools of fish—classifier for individual things or people, general, catch-all classifier— |