释义 |
Examples:can't reach the high or accept the low (idiom); not good enough for a high post, but too proud take a low one—double expulsion (from the party and from the administrative post, as a punishment for corruption)—be reluctant to give up a post—Boris Yeltsin (1931-2007) first post-communist president of Russia 1991-1999—supervisor of textiles (official post in Ming dynasty)—first person be appointed to a post—send sb back to his former post—Leonid Kravchuk (1934-), first post-communist president of Ukraine 1991-1994—rising straight up in a clear sky (idiom); rapid promotion a high post—official post of minister of war in pre-han Chinese states—banish (to an army post, as a punishment)—resign from a leading post (and assume an advisory post)—score highly in imperial exams (and obtain a post)—Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860), German post-Kantian philosopher—relegate a high official to a minor post in an outlying region (punishment in Imperial China)—travel to take up a new post—a trading or transit post on border between countries—relay post-horse mail service (in former times)—Yumen Pass, or Jade Gate, western frontier post on the Silk Road in the Han Dynasty, west of Dunhuang, in Gansu—be transferred to another post—an order post a reward (for the capture of a criminal)—ask sb to resign from a post—celebrity, esp. distinguished literary person having no official post—strangle and slap the back (idiom); fig. to occupy a strategic post—South China Morning Post (newspaper in Hong Kong)—be appointed or elevated to a post—take advantage of official post for personal revenge [idiom.]—fig. sb old but reluctant relinquish their post [idiom.]—double expulsion (from the party and from administrative post, as a punishment for corruption)—appoint sb. to a post or confer a title on sb. by imperial order— |