释义 |
Examples:lit. paint holding two brushes (idiom); fig. to work on two tasks at the same time—one move, two gains (idiom); two birds with one stone—the two cannot exist together (idiom); irreconcilable differences—peptide (two or more amino acids linked by peptide bonds CO-NH)—one of the two chief types of music in Chinese opera—(in the Romanization of Chinese) write two or more syllables together as a single word (not separated by spaces)—side by side (of two processes, developments, thoughts etc)—one person taking on two tasks simultaneously—antithesis (two lines of poetry matching in sense and sound)—bond (esp. document split in two, with each party holding one half)—nunchaku (weapon with two rods joined by a short chain, used in martial arts)—diacritical mark separating two adjacent syllables—(of two performers) speak or sing alternately—Yan and Zhao, two of the Warring States in Hebei and Shanxi—lit. two armies have equivalent banners and drums (idiom); fig. evenly matched—world with only two people (usually refers a romantic couple)—arris (curve formed by two surfaces meeting at an edge)—allele (one of two paired gene in diploid organism)—the two provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi (traditional)—"youth freezing", Chinese girls beginning anti-ageing treatments as young as two years old in the hope they will never look old—(prefix indicating ordinal number, e.g. first, number two etc)—ancient cooking cauldron with two looped handles and three or four legs—the appearance of a mountain, as if two pots were standing one upon the other—Gram stain (used distinguished two different kinds of bacteria)—When two tigers fight, one will get injured (idiom). If it comes a fight, someone will get hurt.—two-person room of standard size and amenities—ancient bronze food vessel with a round mouth and two or four handles—alternate angles (where one line meets two parallel lines)—mixed cropping (i.e. growing two crops together)—arris (sharp ridge formed by two surfaces meeting at an edge)—dualism, belief that the universe is made of two different substance (e.g. mind and matter or good and evil)—Flying Tigers, US airmen in China during World War Two—Jiufen (or Jioufen or Chiufen), mountainside town in north Taiwan, former gold mining town, used as the setting for two well-known movies—fault line where the two sides slide horizontally past one another—shuttle bus ferrying passengers between train stations on two different rail lines—when two kingdoms are at war, they don't execute envoys [idiom.]— |