释义 |
Examples:in one ear and out the other—neither one thing nor the other—stick one leg over the other (when sitting)—lit. the fish and the bear's paw, you can't have both at the same time (idiom, from Mencius); fig. you must choose one or the other—compression fault, where one block pushes over the other at dip of less than 45 degrees—drinking game where one has guess the number of small objects in the other player's closed hand—one thing starts where the other leaves off—one closely following the other—hot pot with a divider, containing spicy soup on one side, mild soup on the other—shift from one hand to the other—may also indicate that one is stating a fact that the other person is not aware of—one leg over the other (legs crossed)—the appearance of a mountain, as if two pots were standing one upon the other—six of one and half a dozen of the other—mountains on one side and water on the other—favour one and discriminate against the other—slap with one hand and then the other, in quick succession—come one after the other—fig. one is just as bad as the other—parts of the country other than where one is—"monkey steals the peach" (martial arts), distracting an opponent with one hand and seizing his testicles with the other—cup one fist in the other hand (as a sign of respect)—(of singers etc) one answering the other—lit. one hand exchanges the cash, the other the goods [idiom.]— |