释义 |
Examples:standard work of scholarship—China Scholarship Council (CSC)—of great erudition and scholarship [idiom.]—the essentials of calligraphy and scholarship [idiom.]—revere people of virtue and honor scholarship [idiom.]—Wang Su (c. 195-256), classical scholar of Cao Wei dynasty, believed have forged several classical texts—Wang Fuzhi (1619-1692), wide-ranging scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar (zither, Go, calligraphy, painting)—Li Fang (925-996), scholar between Tang and Song dynasties, author of fictional history—beautiful lady, gifted scholar (idiom); pair of ideal lovers—Chen Renxi (1581-1636), late Ming scholar and prolific author—Yu Dan (1965-), female scholar, writer, educator and TV presenter—Cheng Hao (1032-1085), Song neo-Confucian scholar—Professor Ibrahim Gambari (1944-), Nigerian scholar and diplomat, ambassador UN 1990-1999, UN envoy to Burma from 2007—lit. the scholar buys a donkey (idiom); fig. long-winded verbiage that never gets the point—scholar-official in the Qing dynasty (1764-1849)—Zhang Chang, official and scholar of the Eastern Han dynasty—Hanan Daoud Khalil Ashrawi (1946-), Palestinian scholar and political activist—gifted scholar, beautiful lady (idiom); pair of ideal lovers—a scholar or government official living in one's village—well versed in letters and military technology (idiom); fine scholar and soldier—Zhang Taiyan (1869-1936), scholar, journalist, revolutionary and leading intellectual around the time of the Xinhai revolution—Liu Xiang (77-6 BC), Han Dynasty scholar and author—Li Zhao (c. 800), Tang dynasty scholar and official—Yang Shouren (16th century), Ming dynasty scholar—lit. pale-faced scholar (idiom); young and inexperienced person without practical experience—fig. (of a student or scholar) diligent and hardworking—Cheng Yi (1033-1107), Song neo-Confucian scholar—Francesco Petrarca (1304-1374), Italian scholar and lyric poet, famous for sonnets—great scholar respected for learning and integrity—Huang Zongxi (1610-1695), scholar and writer of the Ming-Qing transition—Ngawang Choephel (1966-), Tibetan musicologist and dissident, Fullbright scholar (1993-1994), jailed 1995-2002 then released US— |