释义 |
military noun—军 n (almost always used) 军事 n (often used) 武 n 武装 n Examples:Military Commission of the Communist Party Central Committee—Tojo Hideki (1884-1948), Japanese military leader hanged as war criminal in 1948—arrow banner of command (archaic used as symbol of military authority)—official seal (esp. military seal during Qing and Ming times)—military training as a (sometimes compulsory) subject in schools and colleges—yellow peril (offensive term referring the perceived threat to Western nations, of immigration or military expansion from East Asian nations)—(of the military or police) carry loaded rifles ready for an emergency—the banner bearing contingent leading a military procession—the crisis year of 1900 involving the Boxer uprising and the eight nation military invasion—Ahmed Shah Massoud (1953-2001), Tajik Afghan engineer, military man and anti-Taleban leader—Westerner employed in Qing China (as professor or military advisor etc)—Guiseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882), Italian military commander and politician—Zeng Guofan (1811-1872), Qing dynasty politician and military man—Marshal Josip Broz Ti(1892-1980), Yugoslav military and communist political leader, President of Yugoslavia 1945-1980—Report of the Select Committee on US National Security and Military-Commercial Concerns with the PRC (1999); Committee Chairman Republican Rep. Chris Cox—Ulanhu (1906-1988), Soviet trained Mongolian communist who became important PRC military leader—military dependents' village (community established in Taiwan for Nationalist soldiers and their dependents after the KMT retreated from the mainland in 1949)—in Qing times, refers Western technology, esp. military and naval know-how—Office of Military and Political Affairs (Qing Dynasty)—suona, Chinese shawm (oboe), used in festivals and processions or for military purposes—Make the country wealthy and the military powerful, slogan of modernizers in Qing China and Meiji Japan (Japanese pronunciation: Fukoku kyōhei)—soft power (i.e. media influence, propaganda and cultural ties in lieu of military power)—collateral damage (both as a legal term, and as a military euphemism)—General Wei Chigong (585-658), famous military man instrumental in founding the Tang dynasty—successful military candidate in the imperial provincial examination—traditional military costume drama where the performers wear armor (old)—Beijing Nanyuan Airport, military air base and secondary civil airport of Beijing—State Administration Committee on Military Products Trade (SACMPT)—Eight-Nation Alliance, involved in a military intervention in northern China in 1900—top military commander for a country or theater of operations—Ban Chao (33-102), noted Han diplomat and military man—one (unambiguous spoken form when spelling out numbers, esp. on telephone or in military)— |