释义 |
Examples:lit. fly one's banner on a solitary tree (idiom); fig. to act as a loner—Ed Milliband, UK labor politician, opposition leader from 2010—Ling Mengchu (1580-1644), Ming dynasty novelist and dramatist—wasabi (Eutrema wasabi Maxim), a kind of fern used in Japanese cooking—Carol "Dodo" Cheng Yu-Ling (1957-), Hong Kong actress and TV host—three-dimensional road junction (i.e. involving fly-over bridges or underpass tunnels)—fig. sly and treacherous person—lit. let the big cup fly and the small cup walk—Laura Ling, US-Taiwanese woman journalist imprisoned as spy by North Korea in 2009—everything is fine except for one small defect (idiom); the fly in the ointment—indulge in flights of fancy (idiom); to let one's imagination run wild—(ling) unstressed (syllable)—The Sun Shines over the Sanggan River, proletarian novel by Ding Ling, winner of 1951 Stalin prize—fly Amanita or fly agaric (Amanita muscaria)—Cibotium barometz, Asian tropical tree fern with hairy fronds (used in TCM)—doing as one pleases (idiom); foot-loose and fancy free—Dar es Salaam (former capital of Tanzania)—fly high and run far (idiom); to leave in a hurry for a distance place—open the net on one side (idiom); let the caged bird fly—leave the net open on three sides (idiom); let the caged bird fly—Soong Mei-ling or Song Meiling (1898-2003), Chiang Kai-shek's wife (subsequently widow)—lit. the giant Peng bird spreads its wings and begins fly—lit. even given wings, you couldn't fly (idiom); fig. impossible escape—(used as phonetic for za-ke or sack, e.g. in Saxon, Isaac)—the sword moves like a dragon-fly (modern idiom)—fly the flag (as a cover for shady business)—a sly individual has more than one plan fall back on [idiom.]— |