释义 |
Examples:tea egg (egg boiled with flavorings which may include black tea)—gunpowder tea, Chinese green tea whose leaves are each formed ina small pellet—no thought for tea or rice (idiom); melancholic and suffering—scientific exploration team—Sudirman cup (world badminton team competition)—Mikhail Prokhorov (1965-), Russian billionaire and owner of the Brooklyn Nets (NBA team)—special investigating team (legal or judicial)—lit. once said, a team of horses cannot unsay it (idiom); a promise must be kept—lit. firewood, rice, oil, salt, soy, vinegar, and tea—very concentrated type of tea drunk in Chaozhou, Fujian and Taiwan—lit. offer three kinds of tea and six different dishes—dry and roast over a low fire (tea, chestnuts, seaweed etc)—Thomas cup (international badminton team competition)—have tea and refreshments—very concentrated type of tea consumed in Chaozhou, Fujian and Taiwan—teapoy (ornamental tripod with caddies for tea)—spoilt tea, leftover food (idiom); remains after a meal—butter tea (Tibetan, Mongolian etc drink derived from milk)—Davis cup (international tennis team competition)—Georgetown University in Washington D.C., famous as quality Jesuit university and for its basketball team—teh tarik, an Indian-style tea with milk (GM)—Hønefoss, city (and soccer team) in Buskerud, Norway—kill-green (a step in the processing of tea leaves)—Jenny Lang Ping (1960-), Chinese volleyball player, coach of USA women's national team since 2005—leisure time (over a cup of tea, after a meal etc)—the Ryder Cup (US and Europe golf team competition)—set up (team, group, band, organization etc)—sports team (basketball, soccer, football etc)—Catalpa bungei or Manchurian Catalpa, a tea plant—as a whole (situation, construction, team etc)—old tea-horse market between Tibet, China, Southeast Asia and India, formalized as a state enterprise under the Song dynasty—old tea-horse road or southern Silk Road, dating back 6th century, from Tibet and Sichuan through Yunnan and Southeast Asia, reaching to Bhutan, Sikkim, India and beyond—sports team representing a combination of entities (e.g. United Korea)—Lu Yu (733-804), Chinese writer from Tang dynasty, known for his obsession with tea—no heart for tea or rice (idiom); melancholic and suffering— |