释义 |
Examples:audit (accounts, books etc)—the biblical books of the prophets—listening the words of a wise man can be superior to studying ten years of books—variety of small cicada with a green back and a clear song (in ancient books)—burn the books and bury alive the Confucian scholars (one of the crimes of the first Emperor in 212 BC)—books (in Confucian education)—classic books in Confucianism—the Twenty-Four Histories (25 or 26 in modern editions), collection of books on Chinese dynastic history from 3000 BC till 17th century—Book of Amos, one of the books of the Nevi'im and of the Christian Old Testament—a huge amount (of books and papers)—Chinese guillemet《》(punct. used for names of books etc)—Siku Quanshu (collection of books compiled during Qing dynasty)—bamboo box for holding books, clothes etc—become mildewed and worm-eaten (of books)—source material on which later works (books, movies etc) are based—lit. stare at the ceiling while writing a book (idiom); to put one's whole body and soul into a book—Yan Fu (1853-1921), influential Chinese writer and translator of Western books, esp. on social sciences—dig into piles of outdated writings (idiom); to study old books and papers—vocabulary words (in language-learning books)—generic term for history books—Qiu Jin (1875-1907), famous female martyr of the anti-Qing revolution, the subject of several books and films—used in transliterating Buddhist books—burn the books (one of the crimes of the first Emperor in 212 BC)—type of tree in ancient books—lit. enough books make a pack-ox sweat or to fill a house to the rafters (idiom); fig. many books—meaning unknown ("herb mentioned in old books")—ancient books and volumes—list of proscribed people (books etc)—books (in a library or bookstore)—Ye Shengtao (1894-1988), writer and editor, known esp. for children's books—mythical place where the Celestial Emperor stores his books—lit. drop a bag of books (idiom); fig. to drop quotations to appear learned—travel a thousand miles beats reading a thousand books—classifier for books or magazines (almost always used for books) or booklets e.g. passport or driving license—classifier for volumes of books—Knowledge comes from books and from experience of the world. [idiom.]—classifier for ancient Chinese books or paintings in the form of a scroll—can bow and submit, or can stand tall (idiom, from Book of Changes); ready give and take—plant mentioned in Book of Songs, uncertainly identified as carambola or star fruit (Averrhoa carambola)—(cf Book of Songs) How fashion an ax handle? You need an ax—revise one or more editions of a text using an authoritative edition as a source book—reference book (such as dictionary, almanac, gazetteer etc)—Nihonshoki or Chronicles of Japan (c. 720) book of mythology and history—Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, US comic book series, first appeared in 1984, also films, video games etc—Chu Ci, the Songs of Chu (ancient book of poems, collected during Han but esp. from country of Chu c. 500 BC)—The Book of Family Names, anonymous Song dynasty reading primer listing 438 surnames—famine repeats unceasingly (idiom, from Book of Songs)—final remarks (at the end of a book or article)—Joint Publishing, book store chain and publisher, founded in Hong Kong in 1948—observe the past to foresee the future (idiom, taken loosely from Book of Songs); studying ancient wisdom gives insight into what is to come—recording of a person reading the text of a book—one of the 64 trigrams of the Book of Changes (old)—make day as night (idiom, from Book of Songs); fig. to prolong one's pleasure regardless of the hour—the most valuable information (in your recent letter, book etc)—different trades, worlds apart (idiom); sb. outside the profession, it is a closed book— |