释义 |
Examples:Green standard army, standing infantry during Qing dynasty, originally formed from Ming and other Chinese army units—north China army, a modernizing Western-style army set up during late Qing, and a breeding ground for the Northern Warlords after the Qinghai revolution—Japanese Kwantung army (or Kantō army), notorious for numerous atrocities in China during WWII—Ever Victorious Army (1860-1864), Qing dynasty army equipped and trained jointly with Europeans and used esp. against the Taiping rebels—the Resurrected Army (CCTV documentary series about the Terracotta army)—General Than Shwe (1933-), Myanmar army officer and politician, president of Myanmar (Burma) from 1992—Long March (retreat of the Red Army 1934-1935)—north China army (esp. during the warlords period)—Ratko Mladić (1942-), army chief of Bosnian Serbs 1965-1996 and indicted war criminal—troops in defeat like a landslide (idiom); a beaten army in total collapse—Luo Chengjiao (1931-1952), PRC hero of the volunteer army in Korea—Yuanmingyuan, the Old Summer Palace, destroyed by the British and French army in 1860—arms enough stem the stream (idiom); formidable army—lit. a banner distinguish an army unit or the name of its general—total defeat of an army (idiom); fig. a complete wipe-out—the Chinese People's Volunteer Army deployed by China aid North Korea in 1950—Duan Qirui (1864-1936), commander of Beiyang Army under Yuan Shikai, then politician and powerful warlord—shrimp soldiers and crab generals (in mythology or popular fiction, the army of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea)—Anglo-Japanese allied army (intervention during Russian revolution and civil war 1917-1922)—Mahdi army, Iraqi Shia armed militia led by Moqtada Sadr—Cao Gangchuan (1935-), former artillery officer, senior PRC politician and army leader—signal flags (for communicating between ships or army units)—New Fourth army of Republic of China, set up in 1937 and controlled by the communists—(in modern times) the three armed services: Army, Navy and Air Force—Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC)—lit. white cogon flower like fire (idiom); fig. a mighty army like wildfire—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—New Fourth Army Incident of 1940, involving fighting between the nationalists and communists—lit. rich country, strong army (idiom); slogan of legalist philosophers in pre-Han times—classifier for rod-shaped objects, e.g. pens, guns; for army divisions; for songs, compositions or similar—an army burning with righteous indignation is bound win [idiom.]—Easy raise an army of one thousand, but hard to find a good general. [idiom.]—having given away a bride, lose one's army on top of it [idiom.]— |