释义 |
Examples:Once one man gets a government position, all his cronies get in too—Three-Self Patriotic Movement, PRC government-sanctioned Protestant church from 1949—Muromachi bakufu, the feudal government of Japan (1338-1573) under the Ashikaga shoguns—efficient government, people at peace (idiom); all is well with the state and the people—used instead of reign name by the nationalist government, then by Taiwan—place at the imperial court, where emperor handled government affairs, gave orders etc—transfer payment (payment from government or private sector for which no good or service is required in return)—lit. lead beasts to eat the people (idiom); fig. tyrannical government oppresses the people—the treaty of 1923 normalizing relations between the Soviet Union and the Northern Warlord government of China—Janjaweed (armed Baggara herders used by the Sudanese government against Darfur rebels)—Legislative Yuan, the legislative branch of government under the constitution of Republic of China, then of Taiwan—senior provincial government official in dynastic China—agree on three laws (idiom); provisional agreement made by new dynastic government with the people—temporary assignment a Chinese government or CPC post—refers many different areas during late Qing, foreign occupation, warlord period and Nationalist government—National Key Disciplines (disciplines recognized as important and supported by PRC central government, including medicine, science, chemistry, engineering, commerce and law)—commodity prices fixed by government (in a command economy)—unified government purchase at fixed price (esp of farm products)—State Key Laboratories (university laboratories in PRC supported by the central government)—motion of no confidence (against the government, in parliamentary debates)—seat of prefectural government (from Tang Qing times)—war of 1920 between Northern Warlords, in which the Zhili faction beat the Anhui faction and took over the Beijing government—government-appointed hereditary tribal headman in the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties—extra allowances paid government officials in the Qing dynasty—a scholar or government official living in one's village—Qiangba Puncog (1947-), chairman of government of Tibet (i.e. governor)—fig. Internet slang used communicate secret messages that the general public or government can't understand—North China Incident of October-December 1935, a Japanese attempt set up a puppet government in north China—public security bureau (government office similar in function a police station)—rural household contract responsibility system, PRC government policy linking rural income productivity—fifty cents party (person supposed relay government propaganda on Internet sites)— |