释义 |
Examples:Luoyang prefecture level city in Henan, an old capital from pre-Han times—(old) shoes made of woven grass, padded with feathers—old habits are hard change (idiom); It is hard to throw off ingrained habits.—(may also refer other products that are of benefit to old people, such as padded cloth shoes, mobility tricycle etc)—boat-dwelling people of Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian provinces (old)—sticks used for squeezing the fingers (old form of torture)—honor old people as we do our own aged parents—old Chinese name for Calicut, town on Arabian sea in Kerala, India—replaying the same old tunes (idiom); conservative, unoriginal and discredited—(old) visit various rulers and promote one's political ideas (in the Warring States period)—fourth of the five night watch periods 01:00-03:00 (old)—old steed sniffs the wind (idiom); fig. aged person with great aspirations—lit. be born, to grow old, to get sick and to die—request permission to resign from an official position (old)—traditional Asian method of calculating a person's age, which holds that a baby is one year old at birth—complete change from the old rut (idiom); dramatic change of direction—treating youngsters and old folk equally scrupulously—Asakusa, district of Tokyo with an atmosphere of old Japan, famous for the 7th century Buddhist temple, Sensō-ji—lit. an old horse knows the way home (idiom); fig. in difficulty, trust an experience colleague—different broth but the same old medicine (idiom); a change in name only—one of the 64 trigrams of the Book of Changes (old)—squeezing the fingers between sticks (old form of torture)—white (esp. bright white teeth of youth or white hair of old age)—advertise an entrance examination for an academic institution (old)—lit. the old man lost his horse, but it all turned out for the best [idiom.]— |