释义 |
Examples:children's game played with illustrated cards—United Nations Children's Fund—UNICEF (United Nation's Children's fund)—(children's) sliding board—International Children's Day (June 1)—Children's Day (June 1st), PRC national holiday for children under 14—Bing Xin (1900-1999), female poet and children's writer—The Chronicles of Narnia, Children's stories by C.S. Lewis—housekeeper who looks after old people with no children or whose children do not live with them—Winnie-the-Pooh (bear character in children's stories by A. A. Milne adapted by Disney)—Ye Shengtao (1894-1988), writer and editor, known esp. for children's books—arrange reed figures to teach reading (idiom); mother's admirable dedication to her children's education—children's picture story book—children's game, similar knucklebones—Narnia, children's fantasy world in stories by C.S. Lewis—koinobori, a Japanese carp-shaped windsock flown celebrate Children's Day—children's words carry no harm [idiom.]—"flying fish family", family who sacrifice everything send their children abroad to study—hand foot and mouth disease, HFMD, caused by a number of intestinal viruses, usually affecting young children—kill a pig as a lesson to the children (idiom); parents must teach by example—love, esp. within a married couple or between parents and children—Communist Party official whose wife and children have left China reside in a foreign country—encumbered by wife and children—(children) run around parent's knees—children of entrepreneurs who became wealthy under Deng Xiaoping's economic reforms in the 1980s—cross little fingers (between children) as a promise—little monkey (affectionate term for children, subordinates)—abandon wife and children—full-time care (of children in a boarding nursery)—(of parents) bring up children for the purpose of being looked after in old age—love the common people as one's own children (praise for a virtuous ruler)—a crocodile (of school children)—be afraid of strangers (of small children)—support one's husband and raise children—step-children (discriminatory term)—honor old people as we do our own aged parents, and care for other's children as one's own—infantile convulsion (illness affecting children esp. under the age of five, marked by muscular spasms)—qualities that delight children (e.g. bold colors in a picture, anthropomorphized characters in a TV show, the physical challenge of playground equipment)—prefix used before the surname of a person or a numeral indicating the order of birth of the children in a family or indicate affection or familiarity—percentage of children who enter school—egg rolling (rolling of decorated, hard-boiled eggs down hillsides by children at Easter)—money given children as new year present—not suitable for children— |