释义 |
Examples:Military Commission of the Communist Party Central Committee—Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971), secretary-general of Soviet Communist Party 1953-1964—Central Propaganda Department (of the Chinese communist party)—Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), the ruling party of North Korea—Chen Boda (1904-1989), communist party theorist, interpreter of Maoism—go in numbers to attack another party with condemnations—John Huang (1945-), Democratic Party fundraiser—Yun Poseon (1897-1990), South Korean Democratic party politician, mayor of Seoul from 1948, president 1960-1962—fig. accept new members (to reinvigorate the party)—People's Action Party (ruling party in Singapore)—Jack Straw (1946-), UK Labour Party politician, foreign secretary 2001-2006—branch, esp. grass root branches of a political party—Li Dazhao (1889-1927), early Chinese Marxist and founding member of the communist party—First United Front between Guomindang and Communist party, 1923-1927—Funcinpec (royalist Cambodian political party)—Guo Moruo (1892-1978), writer, communist party intellectual and cultural apparatchik—Nambaryn Enkhbayar (1958-), Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party politician, President of Mongolia 2005-2009—(Communist) Party and government administration—Christian Democratic Union (German political party)—within the party (esp. Chinese communist party)—Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China—everyone enjoys themselves the full then party breaks up—Dong Biwu (1886-1975), one of the founders of the Chinese communist party—Michael Grant Ignatieff (1947-), leader of the Liberal Party of Canada—KAN Nao(1946-), Japanese Democratic Party politician, prime minister from 2010—Asif Ali Zardari (1956-), Pakistani People's Party politician, widower of murdered Benazir Bhutto, president of Pakistan from 2008—George Mitchell (1933-), US Democratic party politician and diplomat, influential in brokering Northern Ireland peace deal in 1990s, US Middle East special envoy from 2009—dinner party with singsong girls in attendance—Zhao Ziyang (1919-2005), PRC reforming politician, general secretary of Chinese Communist Party 1987-1989, held under house arrest from 1989 his death, and non-person since then—Nong Duc Manh (1940-), general secretary of the Vietnamese Communist Party 2001-2011—Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), organization within the CCP which investigates corruption and other wrongdoing among Party cadres—Democratic alliance for the betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), Hong Kong pro-Beijing party—lit. sandpiper and clam war together and the fisherman catches both (idiom); fig. neighbors who can't agree lose out a third party— |