释义 |
Examples:former Han dynasty school of Confucian scholars—burn the books and bury alive the Confucian scholars (one of the crimes of the first Emperor in 212 BC)—distinguished assembly (of scholars)—(old form of address for teachers, scholars)—can be enjoyed by scholars and lay-people alike [idiom.]—scholars tend disparage one another [idiom.]—scholars of various talents [idiom.]—Wang Daiyu (1584-1670), Hui Islamic scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—Zhou Dun'yi (1017-1073), Song dynasty neo-Confucian scholar—Wang Su (c. 195-256), classical scholar of Cao Wei dynasty, believed have forged several classical texts—Wang Fuzhi (1619-1692), wide-ranging scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar (zither, Go, calligraphy, painting)—Li Fang (925-996), scholar between Tang and Song dynasties, author of fictional history—beautiful lady, gifted scholar (idiom); pair of ideal lovers—Prosper Mérimée, French scholar and writer, author of novel Carmen on which Bizet based his opera—Chen Renxi (1581-1636), late Ming scholar and prolific author—Yu Dan (1965-), female scholar, writer, educator and TV presenter—Cheng Hao (1032-1085), Song neo-Confucian scholar—Professor Ibrahim Gambari (1944-), Nigerian scholar and diplomat, ambassador UN 1990-1999, UN envoy to Burma from 2007—lit. the scholar buys a donkey (idiom); fig. long-winded verbiage that never gets the point—scholar-official in the Qing dynasty (1764-1849)—Zhang Chang, official and scholar of the Eastern Han dynasty—gifted scholar, beautiful lady (idiom); pair of ideal lovers—a scholar or government official living in one's village—well versed in letters and military technology (idiom); fine scholar and soldier—Zhang Taiyan (1869-1936), scholar, journalist, revolutionary and leading intellectual around the time of the Xinhai revolution—Liu Xiang (77-6 BC), Han Dynasty scholar and author—Li Zhao (c. 800), Tang dynasty scholar and official—Yang Shouren (16th century), Ming dynasty scholar—lit. pale-faced scholar (idiom); young and inexperienced person without practical experience—fig. (of a student or scholar) diligent and hardworking—great scholar respected for learning and integrity—Huang Zongxi (1610-1695), scholar and writer of the Ming-Qing transition—Ngawang Choephel (1966-), Tibetan musicologist and dissident, Fullbright scholar (1993-1994), jailed 1995-2002 then released US— |