释义 |
Examples:grasping officials, corrupt mandarins (idiom); abuse and corruption—reception room for officials (in former times)—high-ranking officials pl—verse criticizing officials—party officials and ordinary people—officials shield one another (idiom); a cover-up—(of officials in Imperial China) live in banishment—princelings, descendants of senior communist officials (PRC)—speculation by officials—choose officials by divination (archaic)—(of officials in imperial times) the highest rank—imperial cavalry guard (of officials or eunuchs)—fig. (of officials etc) honest and incorruptible—silver pheasant badge worn by civil officials of the 5th grade—officials with light duties—encourage and supervise (esp. state officials promoting agriculture)—honest and incorruptible (government officials)—high-ranking officials in the court of a Chinese emperor—connection with high-ranking officials—officials causing a big fuss—family whose members have been officials from generation generation—civil and military officials—extra allowances paid government officials in the Qing dynasty—aids and advisors of top officials—salaries of government officials—seek an audience with higher-ups (esp. government officials) to petition for sth—ride to take up an official appointment (idiom); to take on a job with alacrity—Observatory or Bureau of Astronomy (official title) from the Tang dynasty onwards—lit. flick dust off sb's cap (idiom); to celebrate an official appointment—grand scribe (official position in many Chinese states up the Han)—high official and noble persons (idiom); the great and the good—(official title) herald the crown prince (in Imperial China)—a government official drives the people revolt (idiom); a minister provokes a rebellion by exploiting the people—Communist Party official whose wife and children have left China reside in a foreign country—decision appoint an official that is kept secret among the hierarchy—(in Imperial China) level charges against an official—high post and generous salary (idiom); promotion a high official position—official responsible for arranging audiences with the emperor—imperial censor (formal title of a dynastic official)—office set up in 1914 compile official history of the Qing dynasty—Hu Quan (1102-1180, Song Dynasty official and poet)—golden seal at the waist, purple gown (idiom); in official position—Hong Kong term for mainland government official come work in Hong Kong (slang)—Zhang Chang, official and scholar of the Eastern Han dynasty—request permission to resign from an official position (old)—Shen Guofang (1952-), foreign affairs official (PRC)—relegate a high official to a minor post in an outlying region (punishment in Imperial China)—minister of criminal justice (official rank in Imperial China)—cap badge (official sign of rank in Qing dynasty)—unofficial biography (as opposed official dynastic biography)—official host (e.g. venue for games or a conference)—Eight Honors and Eight Shames, PRC official moral guidelines—celebrity, esp. distinguished literary person having no official post—traitor minister and corrupt official (idiom); abuse and corruption—semi-feudal and semi-colonial (the official Marxist description of China in the late Qing and under the Guomindang)—(of an official) corrupt and negligent of his duty—an official who works with local residents report to higher government authorities—Tang dynasty official with responsibility for animal husbandry— |