释义 |
Examples:the Ch'ing or Qing dynasty (1644-1911)—consonants zh, ch, sh, r produced on the back of the tongue—dimethylarsenic acid (CH3)2AsO2H—heptose (CH2O)7, monosaccharide with seven carbon atoms—tetrose (CH20)4, monosaccharide with four carbon atoms—the (great) Ch'ing or Qing dynasty (1644-1911)—The Book of Changes ("I Ching")—Wang Ching-wei (1883-1944), left wing Guomingdang politician, subsequently Japanese collaborator—lit. stamping and beating the chest (idiom); fig. angry or stressed about sth—chest silhouette (used as a target in shooting practice)—the final years of the Ch'ing or Qing dynasty—Hong Xiuquan or Hung Hsiu-ch'üan (1812-1864), leader of the Taiping rebellion or Taiping Heavenly Kingdom—O Mei Ch'uan (kungfu style)—Wong Yee Ching or Flossie Wong-Staal (1947-) Hong Kong American virologist, joint discoverer of the HIV AIDS virus—external oblique muscle (sides of the chest)—Shiing-Shen Chern (1911-2004), Chinese-American mathematician—pay one's respects by bowing with hands in front of one's chest clasping joss sticks, or with palms pressed together—latissimus dorsi muscle (back of the chest)—head high, chest out (idiom); keep up one's spirits—Qiu Fengjia or Ch'iu Feng-chia (1864-1912), Taiwanese Hakkanese poet—old feminine garment, covering chest and abdomen—Qianlong or Ch'ien-lung, emperor of the Qing dynasty, reigned sixty years (1735-1796)—pectoralis major muscle (across the top of the chest)—serratus anterior muscle (upper sides of the chest)—undergarment covering the chest and abdomen—Ch'ing or Qing dynasty (1644-1911)—aldose, monosaccharide containing aldehyde group -COH—trinitrotoluene (TNT), C6H2(NO2)3CH3—polyformaldehyde (CH2O)n—quinoline C6H4(CH)3N (pharmacology)— |