释义 |
Examples:Grand Prince Yixin (1833-1898), sixth son of Emperor Daoguang, prominent politician, diplomat and modernizer in late Qing—Ögedei Khan (1186-1242), a son of Genghis Khan—Achilles (or Akhilleus or Achilleus), son of Thetis and Peleus, Greek hero central the Iliad—Eliakim, son of Abiud and father of Azor in Matthew 1:13—Matthan, son of Eleazar and father of Jakob in Matthew 1.15—funeral stick (held by the son as a sign of filial piety)—each sticks his own opinion (idiom); chacun son gout—a prodigal son returned home is worth more than gold—parents of one's daughter-in-law or son-in-law—five cardinal relationships of Confucianism (between ruler and subject, father and son, husband and wife, brothers, friends)—Azor (son of Eliakim and father of Zadok in Matthew 1:13-14)—bed of straw and pillow of clay (idiom); the correct etiquette for filial son during Confucian mourning period—Uzziah son of Amaziah, king of Judah c. 750 BC—Truong Son Ra, mountain range forming the border between Vietnam and Laos and Kampuchea—refers a son-in-law living with wife's family—great meal fit for dragon's son (idiom); sumptuous banquet—ferocious mythological animal, the fifth son of the dragon king—the five Confucian relationships (ruler-subject, father-son, brother-brother, husband-wife, friend-friend)—(old) child, particularly referring the son who resembles his father—Brandon Lee (1965-1993), American actor, son of Bruce Lee—lit. hope one's son becomes a dragon (idiom); fig. to long for one' s child to succeed in life—"Son of Heaven" (traditional English translation)—(Prince) Ranariddh (son of King Sihanouk of Cambodia)—pillow of clay (used by filial son during Confucian mourning period)—Zadok (son of Azor and father of Achim in Matthew 1:13)—(of a deserving official) grant his wife a title and make his son heir to his titles—Zhang Xueliang (1901-2001) son of Fengtian clique warlord, then senior general for the Nationalists and subsequently for the People's Liberation Army—give birth a son soon (propitiatory compliment to the newly-weds)—Ganesha (the elephant-headed God in Hinduism, son of Shiva and Parvati)—Cupid, son of Venus and Mars, Roman god of love and beauty—illustrious hero, spirit of the place (idiom); a place derives reflected glory from an illustrious son—Jephthah (Hebrew: Yiftach) son of Gilead, Judges 11-foll.— |