释义 |
Examples:reception pavilion (generally part of a large residence, and often built in a garden)—cook by dipping finely sliced ingredients briefly in boiling water or soup (generally done at the dining table)—(economics) bonus stock or share, i.e. share issued fully or partly paid an existing shareholder in a company, generally on a pro rata basis—phonetic transcription of China (Japanese: Shina), colonial term, generally considered discriminatory—photobook (loanword from Japanese), generally sexy portraits of an actress or model—stop work for the day (generally of laborers)—Fu Zuoyi (1895-1974), Guomindang general, subsequently PRC top general and politician—folk song from Wu or from south China more generally—Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971), secretary-general of Soviet communist party 1953-1964—General Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964), US commander in Pacific during WW2, sacked in 1951 by President Truman for exceeding orders during the Korean war—one tiny clue reveals the general trend (idiom); small beginnings show how things will develop—Hannibal Barca (247-183 BC), Carthaginian general—general trade (i.e. importing and export without processing)—Kul Tigin or Kultegin (685-c. 731), general of the Second Turkic Kaganate—Hamilcar (c. 270-228 BC), Carthaginian statesman and general—Huan Xuan (369-404), general involved in the break-up of Eastern Jin—Sun Ce (175-200), general and major warlord of the Later Han Dynasty—Wang Shichong (-621), general of late Sui and opponent of early Tang—Huang Zhong (-220), general of Shu in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, portrayed as an old fighter—Yue Fei (1103-1142), Song dynasty patriot and general—Nong Duc Manh (1940-), general secretary of the Vietnamese Communist Party 2001-2011—Loongson (a family of general-purpose CPUs developed within China)—classifier for individual things or people, general, catch-all classifier—Easy raise an army of one thousand, but hard to find a good general. [idiom.]— |