释义 |
Examples:war on all sides (idiom); fighting from all four quarters—National protection war or Campaign defend the republic (1915), a rebellion against the installation of Yuan Shikai as emperor—lit. fire beacons in all four directions (idiom); the confusion of war—Pericles (c. 495-429 BC), Athenian strategist and politician before and at the start of the Peloponnesian war—General Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964), US commander in Pacific during WW2, sacked in 1951 by President Truman for exceeding orders during the Korean war—Tojo Hideki (1884-1948), Japanese military leader hanged as war criminal in 1948—Treaty of Nanjing (1842) that concluded the First Opium War between Qing China and Britain—knowing the enemy and yourself will get you unscathed through a hundred battles (idiom, from Sunzi's "The Art of War")—Bernard Montgomery (Montie) (1887-1976), Second World War British field marshal—Imjin war, Japanese invasion of Korea 1592-1598—John Hawkins (1532-1595), British seaman involved in sea war with Spain—lend-lease (US device provide war materiel to its allies during WW2)—Guo Xiaochuan (1919-1976), PRC communist poet, hero in the war with Japan, died after long persecution during Cultural Revolution—Nanchang Uprising, 1st August 1927, the beginning of military revolt by the Communists in the Chinese Civil War—Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria (1863-1914), heir the Hapsburg throne, whose assassination in Sarajevo led to World War I—Lin Zexu or Lin Tse-hsu "Commissioner Lin" (1785-1850), Qing official whose anti-opium activities led first Opium war with Britain 1840-1842—Amédée Courbet (1826-1885), a French admiral who won a series of important land and naval victories during the Tonkin campaign and the Sino-French War—The Thirty-Six Stratagems, a Chinese essay used illustrate a series of stratagems used in politics, war, and in civil interaction—official post of minister of war in pre-han Chinese states—Anglo-Japanese allied army (intervention during Russian revolution and civil war 1917-1922)—war of resistance, especially the war against Japan (1937-1945)—the Six-Day War of June 1967 between Israel and its Arab neighbors—war of 1920 between Northern Warlords, in which the Zhili faction beat the Anhui faction and took over the Beijing government—Li Yingru (1913-1989), calligrapher and writer, author of many novels about the war as seen by the communists—Pacific War between Japan and the US, 1941-1945—Chidori ga fuchi, national war cemetery in Tokyo—the war of 1904-1905 between Russia and Japan—(arch.) religious ritual on setting out for war—Campaign defend the republic (1915) or National protection war, a rebellion against the installation of Yuan Shikai as emperor—know the enemy and know oneself (idiom, from Sunzi's "The Art of War")—Sino-French War (1883-1885) (concerning French seizure of Vietnam)—major political event (war or change of regime)—the time is right, geographical and social conditions are favorable (idiom); a good time go to war— |