释义 |
Examples:lit. fly one's banner on a solitary tree (idiom); fig. to act as a loner—It takes ten years nurture a tree, but a hundred years to train a man (idiom). A good education program takes a long time to develop.—pattra palm tree (Corypha umbraculifera), whose leaves were used as paper substitute for Buddhist sutras—a legendary tree that sheds coins when shaken—ginkgo (tree with fan-shaped leaves and yellow seeds)—lit. every tree or bush an enemy soldier (idiom); fig. panic and treat everyone as an enemy—Cibotium barometz, Asian tropical tree fern with hairy fronds (used in TCM)—wutong or Paulownia tree (Fermiana platanifolia), a lightweight strong wood used for musical instruments—sandalwood (Santalum album), a Nepalese tree producing valuable fragrant oil—good Chinese wood-oil tree (Aleurites cordata)—pattra palm tree (loan from Sanskrit, Corypha umbraculifera), whose leaves were used as paper substitute for Buddhist sutras—lit. point at the mulberry tree and curse the locust tree—lit. you plant a garden and the flowers do not bloom, you poke a stick in the mud and it grows ina tree—Styracaceae, tree family including silver-bell, snowdrop and benzoin—burial of cremated remains at the foot of a tree—lit. idly poke a stick in the mud and it grows ina tree to shade you—lit. the red apricot tree leans over the garden wall—When the tree topples the monkeys scatter. (idiom); fig. an opportunist abandons an unfavorable cause—Betulaceae (broadleaf tree family including birch and alder)—lit. don't tie your shoelaces in a melon patch, and don't adjust your hat under a plum tree [idiom.]—lit. only one branch of the tree is thriving [idiom.]—classifier for sections of plants such as bamboo or sugarcane; tree branches; class periods at school; cylindrical batteries, train carriages— |