释义 |
Examples:the Mukden or Manchurian Railway Incident of 18th September 1931 used by the Japanese as a pretext annex Manchuria—the Mukden or Manchurian railway incident of 18th September 1931 used by the Japanese as a pretext annex Manchuria—putty (used by plumbers and glaziers)—I (first person pronoun used by royalty or nobility)—slave network (used by spammers)—I, me (humble term used by men in public speech)—Janjaweed (armed Baggara herders used by the Sudanese government against Darfur rebels)—curtained carriage used by women—mildly pejorative term used by Chinese for assimilated Asian Americans—poor monk (humble term used by monk of himself)—Master (term used by servant)—(old) contemptuous term for people from southern China (used by northern Chinese people)—a kind of sleeping gas or smoke used by thieves incapacitate victims—son-in-law (used by wife's family)—restraining pole (used by police)—(old) young fellow (term of address used by the older generation)—(from the Tang Dynasty onwards) term used by the emperor for his subjects (old)—woman of similar age one's parents (term of address used by child)—eye chart (used by optician)—the head of the house (used by servants)—password (used by sentry)—pillow of clay (used by filial son during Confucian mourning period)—native state (term used by British Colonial power refer to independent states of India or Africa)—water-boarding, interrogation technique used by CIA—bell or gong used by street peddlers, barbers etc attract attention—hand drum used by peddlers—religion other than Buddhism (term used by Buddhists)—band used by Manchu women gather up the hair—white cane (used by the blind)—percussion instrument in the form of a bamboo fish (traditionally used by Daoist priests)—a drum-shaped rattle (used by peddlers or as a toy)—yes (used by Emperor or ruler)—nunchaku (weapon with two rods joined by a short chain, used in martial arts)—dog hole wide open (idiom); fig. gap caused by missing teeth (used mockingly)—I, me (self-referring by a widowed empress etc, used in historical novels and operas)—arrow used as a token of authority (by field commanders)— |