释义 |
Examples:lit. breeze is still, waves are quiet (idiom); tranquil environment—lit. ride the wind and crest the waves—gleaming reflection of waves in sunlight—drift with the waves and yield to the flow (idiom); to follow the crowd blindly—(of waves) surge forward—great waves (fig. of a story with great momentum)—The Surging Waves Pavillion in Suzhou, Jiangsu—occurring again and again (of applause, fires, waves, protests, conflicts, uprisings etc)—klystron (electronic tube used produce high frequency radio waves)—lit. without wind there cannot be waves (idiom); there must be a reason—advancing wave upon wave—electromagnetic waves pl—bluster (of wind, waves etc)—before the first wave subsides, a new wave rises (idiom); a new problem arises before the old is solved—filtering radio waves (i.e. pick out one frequency)—detect (e.g. radio waves)—beat the short (of waves)—where the wind and the waves are the fiercest—James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879), Scottish physicist and mathematician, the originator of Maxwell's laws of electromagnetism and electromagnetic waves—lines formed by waves on a beach—drift with the waves and go with the flow (idiom); to follow the crowd blindly—crystalline waves [idiom.]—push the wave and add to the billows (idiom); to add momentum—wave-particle duality in quantum mechanics—sinusoidal (shaped like a sine wave)—traveling wave tube (electronics)—wave a chicken feather as a token of authority (idiom); to assume unwarranted authority on the basis of some pretext—wave flags and shout battle cries (idiom); to egg sb on—wave mechanics (physics)—harmonic (wave with frequency an integer multiple of the fundamental)—lit. wave a banner as if it were a tiger skin [idiom.]— |