释义 |
some —些 (almost always used) 一些 某些 某 两 Examples:final (i.e. final consonant or stop of some syllables in Asian phonetics)—it's none of my business ("I’m just here buy some soy sauce")—without rules, how can anything be done (idiom); one must follow some rules—the melting point of silver 962°C used as a calibration point in some temperature scales—overemphasize some topic (at the expense of others)—wave a chicken feather as a token of authority (idiom); to assume unwarranted authority on the basis of some pretext—profit from a disaster (idiom); some good comes out of a setback—Kang Sheng (1896-1975), Chinese communist leader, a politburo member during the Cultural Revolution and posthumously blamed for some of its excesses—lit. hundred foot pole, progress still further (idiom); fig. much accomplished, still some work do—agnosticism, the philosophical doctrine that some questions about the universe are in principle unanswerable—Mahdi or Mehdi (Arabic: Guided one), redeemer of some Islamic prophesy—please give (some of your valuable) attention my task—without rules, nothing can be done (idiom, from Mencius); one must follow some rules—vocal accompaniment in some traditional Chinese operas—leave a place where some event is taking place—sultan (ruler of some Muslim states, esp. Ottoman Emperor)—without rules, nothing can be done (idiom); one must follow some rules—thin skin on the inside of some fruits (e.g. oranges)—fig. topsy-turvy and inequitable, e.g. manufacturing and trading costs exceed the sale price (of some goods)—all kinds of martial art sports (some claiming spiritual development)—some people have be pushed for them to take action—classifier for birds and certain animals, one of a pair, some utensils, vessels etc—the Absolute or Supreme Ultimate, the source of all things according some interpretations of Chinese mythology—premolar tooth (immediately behind canine teeth in some mammals)—a slogan used in reference a project to improve greenery in some parts of Northern China—lit. for some things a foot may be too short, and for the other an inch will suffice (proverb)—noun suffix for a specialist in some activity, such as a musician or revolutionary, corresponding English -ist, -er, -ary or -ian— |