释义 |
Examples:guests filled the hall (idiom); a house full of distinguished visitors—guests filled all the seats (idiom); a house full of distinguished visitors—filled capacity (of theater, stadium, gymnasium etc)—layer filled with rammed earth in a tomb pit (archeology)—inarizushi (pouch of fried tofu typically filled with rice)—shengjian, a pan-fried bun filled with meat and juices, a Shanghai specialty—lit. strung through and filled with evil (idiom); filled with extreme evil—have one's heart filled with—The room is filled with cobwebs. [idiom.]—starved corpses fill the roads (idiom); state of famine—lit. cries of complaint fill the roads (idiom); complaints rise all around—lit. fill the whole sky and cover the land; everywhere—fill in a blank (e.g. on questionnaire or exam paper)—lit. mythical bird Jingwei tries fill the ocean with stones (idiom); futile ambition—sea of hatred is hard fill (idiom); irreconcilable division—fill boxes and baskets to the brim (with treasures)—fill the road (also fig. clamor, cries of complaint)—lit. enough books make a pack-ox sweat or to fill a house to the rafters (idiom); fig. many books—make up the number (i.e. to fill places up to a given number)—fill the house (at a wedding or auspicious occasion)—lamentations fill the roads (idiom); severe suffering all around— |