释义 |
Examples:a drum-shaped rattle (used by peddlers or as a toy)—wind instrument consisting of an egg-shaped chamber with holes—percussion instrument shaped as a hollow wooden tiger, with serrated strip across the back, across which one runs a drumstick—bacillus (any rod-shaped bacteria)—football played with oval-shaped ball (rugby, American football, Australian rules etc)—sinusoidal (shaped like a sine wave)—Chinese drum-shaped stool—red, heart-shaped symbol—ginkgo (tree with fan-shaped leaves and yellow seeds)—square-shaped formation (military)—lunar caustic (fused silver nitrate, shaped ina stick and used as a cauterizing agent)—pipa, Chinese lute, with 4 strings, a large pear-shaped body and a fretted fingerboard—wax apple (a reddish pear-shaped fruit)—elegant, almond-shaped eyes with the inner canthus pointing down and the outer canthus up, like the eye of a phoenix—pair of mussel-shaped objects thrown on the ground for divination purposes—ancient inlaid ornament shaped as a flower—fantastic oddities of every description (idiom); grotesquely shaped—spiral-shaped bacterium, e.g. causing syphilis—V-shaped river valley with steep sides—crescent-shaped barbican—ox-head shaped wine vessel—koinobori, a Japanese carp-shaped windsock flown celebrate Children's Day—classifier for rod-shaped objects e.g. sticks, rods, pencils, a flower on the stem etc.—...-shaped thing (suffix)—classifier for rod-shaped objects, e.g. pens, guns; for army divisions; for songs, compositions or similar—things have not even begun take shape—paper dolls for ritual use in the shape of people or animals—lose (flavor, freshness, shape, hair, one's good looks etc)—door knocker (in the shape of a ring)—Tsim Sha Tsui, urbanized area in Hong Kong—Sha Wujing, character from the Journey the West—T-step (basic dance position, with the feet forming a T shape)—imagawayaki (sweet snack made of batter cooked in the shape of a car wheel, stuffed with azuki bean paste or other fillings)—Sha Tin town in New Territories, Hong Kong—Sha Tau Kok (town in Hong Kong)—traditional communal residence, usually of circular shape, found in Fujian province—clay ox, wooden horse (idiom); shape without substance—the spoon shape slope on the nape—Cheung Sha Wan (poultry market in Hong Kong)—phonetic "sha" used in transliteration—gua sha (technique in TCM)— |