释义 |
Examples:war on all sides (idiom); fighting from all four quarters—split one's sides laughing—a new branch grows out of a knot (idiom); fig. side issues keep arising—fire beacons on all sides (idiom); enveloped in the flames of war—Agnes Smedley (1892-1950), US journalist and activist, reported on China, esp. the communist side—side by side (of two processes, developments, thoughts etc)—side wall of a traditional Chinese house (old)—dizziness, nausea etc brought on as a side effect of drug treatment (Chinese medicine)—akathisia (condition of restlessness, a side-effect of neuroleptic antipsychotic drug)—complications (undesired side-effect of medical procedure)—protrusions on either side of a cannon facilitating mounting and vertical pivot—triforium (gallery of arches above side-aisle vaulting in the nave of a church)—pair of lines of verse written vertically down the sides of a doorway—relationship between cousins etc on the paternal side of a family—visceral arch (gill-bearing arch or its vestigial crease on sides of neck of vertebrates)—Stevenson screen (white box with ventilated sides, housing meteorological instruments)—the left- and right-side of a split Chinese character, often the key (radical) and phonetic—left-hand side of a split Chinese character, often the key or radical—hot pot with a divider, containing spicy soup on one side, mild soup on the other—place side by side for comparison (as parallel texts)—the mid-line between sides on a Chinese chessboard—the Japanese side or party (in negotiations etc)—lit. a notch on the side of a boat locate a sword dropped overboard (idiom); fig. an action made pointless by changed circumstances—doing things by the side door (i.e. dishonestly)—lean unsteadily from side to side (idiom); to sway—roads open in all directions (idiom); accessible from all sides—carry (esp. slung over the arm, shoulder or side)—hawsehole (small hole for anchor cable or hawser in the side of ship)—sit and await success or failure (idiom); to wait to see the outcome of a fight before taking sides—bow around with hands joined (to people on all sides)—leave the net open on three sides (idiom); let the caged bird fly—the Chinese side (in an international venture)—serve Qin in the morning Chu in the evening (idiom); quick switch sides—temple (the sides of human head)—fault line where the two sides slide horizontally past one another—set to one side and ignore (idiom); quite indifferent—appellee (side that won in trial court, whose victory is being appealed by losing side)—serratus anterior muscle (upper sides of the chest)—Agnes Smedley (1892-1950), US journalist who reported on China, esp. the communist side—right-hand side (passenger side) of a vehicle—the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence—lit. both sides of the Yangtze River [idiom.]—watch in safety whilst others fight then reap the rewards when both sides are exhausted [idiom.]—sit side-by-side and have a heart-to-heart talk [idiom.]—favor an outsider instead of someone on one's own side [idiom.]— |