释义 |
Chinese noun—中 n (almost always used) ()中文 n ()Examples:Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus davidianus)—one of the two chief types of music in Chinese opera—Chinese character that combines the meanings of existing elements—CPPCC (Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference)—regular script (one of the calligraphic styles of Chinese characters)—fire cupping (acupressure technique of Chinese medicine, with fired vacuum cup applied the skin)—disturbing the privacy of bridal room (Chinese custom where guests banter with and play pranks on the newlyweds)—Tsung-Dao Lee (1926-), Chinese American physicist, Columbia University, 1957 Nobel laureate—the key or radical by which a character is arranged in a traditional Chinese dictionary—those who did not benefit from the Chinese economic reforms of the 1980s—Tuzki, a popular Chinese illustrated rabbit character—mildly pejorative term used by Chinese for assimilated Asian Americans—have difficulty remembering how to write Chinese characters—signal the musicians (in Chinese opera, by prolonging a spoken word before attacking a song)—(Chinese) characters native Korea, Japan, Vietnam etc—level and oblique tones (technical term for classical Chinese rhythmic poetry)—a southern Chinese dialect of Fujian and east Guangdong—Jia Yi (200-168 BC), Chinese poet and statesman of the Western Han Dynasty—Shiing-Shen Chern (1911-2004), Chinese-American mathematician—Beipai Tanglang Quan - "Northern Praying Mantis" (Chinese Martial Art)—Annotated Sounds, a phonetic transliteration for Chinese used esp. in Taiwan—Chinese in the context of the Nationalist Government—"speech" or "words" radical in Chinese characters (Kangxi radical 149)—sprouts and tender leaves of Chinese spinach (Amaranthus spp.) used as food—freehand drawing or painting in traditional Chinese style—grid paper (manuscript paper with squares for Chinese characters)—Dong Biwu (1886-1975), one of the founders of the Chinese communist party—sihu (or "khuurchir" in Mongolian), a bowed instrument with four strings, primarily associated with Mongolian and Chinese culture—(of Chinese pronunciation) a vowel followed by a nasal consonant—Zhao, one of the seven states during the Warring States Period of Chinese history (475-220 BC)—Jiyun, Chinese rime dictionary with 53,525 single-character entries, published in 11th century—Iris Chang (1968-2004), Chinese American historian and author of the Rape of Nanjing—Chi Haotian (1929-), Chinese Minister of National Defense 1993-2003—one of the 28 lunar mansions in Chinese astronomy—Wang Ming (1904-1974), Soviet trained Chinese communist, Comintern and Soviet stooge and left adventurist in the 1930s, fell out with Mao and moved Soviet Union from 1956— |