释义 |
Examples:side by side (of two processes, developments, thoughts etc)—steep-sided flat-topped mountain—mogote (steep-sided pointed hill in karst landform)—place side by side for comparison (as parallel texts)—combining native and foreign methods (idiom); sophisticated and many-sided—(fig.) fight a one-sided battle—lean unsteadily from side to side (idiom); to sway—six-sided talks (on North Korea)—six-sided figure (such as a cube or parallelepiped)—appellee (side that won in trial court, whose victory is being appealed by losing side)—right-hand side (passenger side) of a vehicle—sit side-by-side and have a heart-to-heart talk [idiom.]—a new branch grows out of a knot (idiom); fig. side issues keep arising—Agnes Smedley (1892-1950), US journalist and activist, reported on China, esp. the communist side—side wall of a traditional Chinese house (old)—dizziness, nausea etc brought on as a side effect of drug treatment (Chinese medicine)—akathisia (condition of restlessness, a side-effect of neuroleptic antipsychotic drug)—complications (undesired side-effect of medical procedure)—protrusions on either side of a cannon facilitating mounting and vertical pivot—triforium (gallery of arches above side-aisle vaulting in the nave of a church)—relationship between cousins etc on the paternal side of a family—the left- and right-side of a split Chinese character, often the key (radical) and phonetic—left-hand side of a split Chinese character, often the key or radical—hot pot with a divider, containing spicy soup on one side, mild soup on the other—the Japanese side or party (in negotiations etc)—lit. a notch on the side of a boat locate a sword dropped overboard (idiom); fig. an action made pointless by changed circumstances—doing things by the side door (i.e. dishonestly)—carry (esp. slung over the arm, shoulder or side)—hawsehole (small hole for anchor cable or hawser in the side of ship)—the Chinese side (in an international venture)—set to one side and ignore (idiom); quite indifferent—Agnes Smedley (1892-1950), US journalist who reported on China, esp. the communist side—the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence—favor an outsider instead of someone on one's own side [idiom.]— |