释义 |
Examples:let the cat out of the bag —Curiosity killed the cat.—the cat weeps for the dead mouse (idiom); hypocritical pretence of condolence—Felidae (the cat family)—Mozambique, SE Africa (Tw)—Tingri county, Tibetan: Ding ri rdzong, in Shigatse prefecture, Tibet—lit. qin and se sing in harmony—qin and se, two string instruments that play in perfect harmony—(like) a cat on a hot tin roof—Arthur's Town, Cat Island—play a cat and mouse game—Wu Ding (c. 14th century BC), legendary founder and wise ruler of Shang dynasty—Garfield (comic strip cat created by Jim Davis)—Empress Dowager Cixi or Ts'u Hsi (reigned 1861-1908)—glycine (Gly), an amino acid—leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis)—The Sun Shines over the Sanggan River, proletarian novel by Ding Ling, winner of 1951 Stalin prize—Swaziland, SE Africa (Tw)—lit. drawing a tiger using a cat as a model (idiom); fig. pretend to do sth without understanding it—Tingri town and county, Tibetan: Ding ri rdzong, in Shigatse prefecture, central Tibet—maneki-neko or "lucky cat", Japanese figurine cat usually found at the entrance of shops, restaurants etc, believed bring good fortune—Sun Ce (175-200), general and major warlord of the Later Han Dynasty—Fu Shuo (c. 14th century BC), legendary sage and principal minister of Shang ruler Wu Ding—Frank Chang-ting Hsieh (1946-), Taiwanese DPP politician, mayor of Kaohsiung 1998-2005—Tse Ting-Fung or Nicholas Tse (1980-), cantopop star—Guanting or Kuan-ting reservoir in Hebei, one of the main water reservoirs serving Beijing—Ding Ruchang (1836-1895), commander of the Qing North China Navy—the cat (as in "let the cat out of the bag")—Matsu, name of a sea goddess still widely worshipped on the SE China coast and in SE Asia—Empress Dowager Cixi or Ts'u Hsi (1835-1908), regent 1861-1908—gherao (from Hindi, SE Asian method of protest)—Ye Ting (1896-1946), communist military leader—forgetting the fate of Ding and Dong [idiom.]—trichothecenes (TS, T-2)— |