释义 |
Examples:the army of Yellow Turbans, a peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—army of right, center and left—shrimp soldiers and crab generals (in mythology or popular fiction, the army of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea)—National protection army of 1915 (in rebellion against Yuan Shikai)—New Fourth army of Republic of China, set up in 1937 and controlled by the communists—army regiment at the disposal of province governor-general—March of the Volunteer Army (PRC National Anthem)—Cai E (1882-1916), originator of the National protection army of 1915—Easy raise an army of one thousand, but hard to find a good general. [idiom.]—General Than Shwe (1933-), Myanmar army officer and politician, president of Myanmar (Burma) from 1992—Zhu De (1886-1976), communist leader and founder of the People's Liberation Army—Long March (retreat of the Red Army 1934-1935)—Ratko Mladić (1942-), army chief of Bosnian Serbs 1965-1996 and indicted war criminal—Luo Chengjiao (1931-1952), PRC hero of the volunteer army in Korea—(of army officers) be on duty for the week—lit. a banner distinguish an army unit or the name of its general—total defeat of an army (idiom); fig. a complete wipe-out—Duan Qirui (1864-1936), commander of Beiyang Army under Yuan Shikai, then politician and powerful warlord—low-level officer of the army from the Ming the mid Qing Dynasty—main strength of an army—magnificent army with thousands of men and horses (idiom); impressive display of manpower—Zhang Xueliang (1901-2001) son of Fengtian clique warlord, then senior general for the Nationalists and subsequently for the People's Liberation Army—Andreas Baader (1943-1977), leader of Red Army Faction, a.k.a. the Baader-Meinhof group—New Fourth Army Incident of 1940, involving fighting between the nationalists and communists—(of a marching army) in utter silence—lit. rich country, strong army (idiom); slogan of legalist philosophers in pre-Han times—Lin Biao (1908-1971), Chinese army leader at time of the Cultural Revolution—having given away a bride, lose one's army on top of it [idiom.]— |