释义 |
Examples:the Three Religions (Daoism, Confucianism, Buddhism) and Nine Schools (Confucians, Daoists, Yin-Yang, Legalists, Logicians, Mohists, Political Strategists, Eclectics, Agriculturists)—class meeting (in schools)—grading system (in schools, universities etc)—Meiwa (common name for Japanese companies or schools)—military training as a (sometimes compulsory) subject in schools and colleges—a hundred flowers bloom, a hundred schools of thought contend (idiom); refers the classical philosophic schools of the Warring States period 475-221 BC, but adopted for Mao's campaign of 1956—the Hundred Schools of Thought, the various schools of thought and their exponents during the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods (770-220 BC)—Chinese studies (in foreign schools)—morning exercises (physical exercises commonly performed en masse at schools and workplaces in East Asian countries)—return to the same school and repeat a course from which one has already graduated, as a result of failing to get good enough results to progress to one's desired higher-level school—refers the philosophical schools of pre-Han China—invitation tournament (e.g. between schools or firms)—a hundred schools of thought contend (idiom); refers the classical philosophic schools of the Warring States period 475-221 BC—School of Logicians of the Warring States Period (475-220 BC), also called the School of Names—various sages and ten schools of thought—used in names of media companies, schools etc—Dismiss the hundred schools, revere only the Confucians (slogan of former Han dynasty)—School of Agriculture, school of thought of the Warring States Period (475-221 BC)—two shift system (in schools)—Dismiss the hundred schools, revere only the Confucian [idiom.]—classifier for groups of people, herds of animals, flocks of birds, schools of fish—the five schools of Chan Buddhism [idiom.]—May 7 Cadre School (forcing educated people inre-education and peasant labor during Cultural Revolution)—former Han dynasty school of Confucian scholars—Young Pioneers (primary school league, a preparation for Communist Youth League)—excelling both in morals and studies (idiom); top marks for studies and for behaviour (at school)—Tantui, a northern school of martial arts boxing—subsidiary primary school (originally attached an institute, university etc)—language pledge (speak only the target language in a language school)—Sandro Botticelli (1445-1510) Italian painter of the Florentine school—fig. (of fresh graduates) apply the still-fresh knowledge gained in school—originator (of a tradition, school of thought etc)—Kurt Lewing (1890-1944), German American psychologist of the Gestalt school, the author of Field Theory—(according an old system of nomenclature) on entering school life, a formal personal name given to new students—Yellow hat or Gelugpa school of Tibetan buddhism—nurture (a development, school of thought, artwork etc)—Bauhaus (German school of modern architecture and design)—older (than average in a group, at school, for marriage etc)—dissenting religious sect (idiom); heretical school of opinion—London University School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)—give answering phrase (school exercise in memory or composition)—be on the waiting list (for admission to a school)—be a proponent of (an idea or school of thought)—enter the prefecture school under the imperial examination system—Mandarin ducks and butterfly (i.e. love birds) literary school around 1900, criticized as populist and romantic by socialist realists—Fuzhou Naval College, a.k.a. Foochow Naval Dockyard School, set up in 1866 by the Qing dynasty—school or faction passing on faithfully one's doctrine—Wei and Jin philosophical school amalgamating Daoist and Confucian ideals—representative individual (of a school of thought)—Zou Yan (305-240 BC), founder of the School of Yin-Yang of the Warring States Period (475-221 BC)—classifier for recurring events, often annual, such as conferences, class years in school—classifier for sections of plants such as bamboo or sugarcane; tree branches; class periods at school; cylindrical batteries, train carriages— |