释义 |
Examples:a golden house keep one's mistress (idiom); a magnificent house built for a beloved woman—ten thousand houses or households—the property market (e.g. houses)—lane neighborhoods in parts of Shanghai, with modified Chinese courtyard houses, occupied by single families in the 1930s, now crowded with multiple families—as solid as rock (idiom); as sure as houses—enter houses at night in order to rape women—splendid and magnificent houses (idiom); a sumptuous mansion—(attached name of publishing houses)—both houses of US Congress—classifier for houses or buildings—thatched house, broken urn windows (idiom); poor person's house—classifier for houses, small buildings, hospitals and institutions—lit. love the house and its crow (idiom); involvement with sb and everyone connected—guests filled the hall (idiom); a house full of distinguished visitors—overgrown gate, wicker windows (idiom); poor person's house—guests filled all the seats (idiom); a house full of distinguished visitors—lit. broken tiles, cold hearth; fig. a broken-down house—tenement house (esp. in southern China and Hong Kong)—Blue House (Cheong Wa Dae 청와대), residence of the president of South Korea in Seoul—fig. people who cannot afford buy their own house—congratulations on house-moving or promotion (idiom); Best wishes for your new home!—"village-certificated house", residence supposedly only transferable other village residents but often sold on the open market—Nancy Pelosi (1940-), US Democrat politician from California, speaker of US House of Representatives from 2007—lit. ask passers-by how build one's house (idiom); fig. to have no idea what to do—lead the wolf into the house (idiom); to leave oneself open to attack—lit. the gate of a noble house is like the sea—lit. enough books make a pack-ox sweat or to fill a house to the rafters (idiom); fig. many books—house acquired indirectly through a middle-man—house built with cheap, unreliable concrete which contains a high quantity of sea sand—fill the house (at a wedding or auspicious occasion)—no-frills civil wedding ceremony lacking a material foundation: no car, house, reception, rings, or honeymoon—two chambers (of legislative assembly), e.g. House of Representatives and Senate—Asa (?-870 BC), third king of Judah and fifth king of the House of David (Judaism)—the part of a house facing the street serving as a store— |