释义 |
Examples:daring act and courageous enough to take responsibility for it—lit. prescribe the right medicine for an illness (idiom); fig. to study a problem to find the right way to solve it—using one character interchangeably for phonetically related characters—fish in troubled water (idiom); to take advantage of a crisis for personal gain—lose at sunrise but gain at sunset (idiom); to compensate later for one's earlier loss—renounce profit and seek fame (idiom); to abandon greed for reputation—abandon self for others (idiom); to sacrifice oneself to help the people—the benevolent man cannot be rich and vice versa (idiom, from Mencius). It is easier for a camel go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19:24).—submit for approval to higher authority—go to school for the first time as a child—be transported to a distant place for penal servitude—(slang) go to jail for a second offense—journey to India on a quest for the Buddhist scriptures—wish for higher status (idiom); to curry favor in the hope of promotion—Treaty of Saint Petersburg of 1881 in which Russia agreed hand back Yili province to Qing China in exchange for compensation payment and unequal treaty rights—give one's body for the nation (idiom); to spend one's whole life in the service of the country—ask for leave to withdraw—cut a text down to size for publication—be unable to carry on even for a single day—a screen wall across the gate of a house (for privacy)—advance funds to sb for later repayment—dress up in disguise (idiom); to pretend for the purpose of deceit—fortify defenses and raze the fields (idiom); to leave nothing for the invader—the benevolent man cannot be rich (idiom, from Mencius). It is easier for a camel go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19:24).—deny oneself comforts in order to save money for one's education—fly high and run far (idiom); to leave in a hurry for a distance place—work for a living (esp. of woman needleworker)—see what is right and act courageously (idiom, from Analects); to stand up bravely for the truth—apply to a court for an arrest warrant—virtual currency created by Baidu for use on its websites (coin.baidu.com)—dig for thoughts (idiom); to search everything for an answer—be indebted to sb for care—give up life for righteousness (idiom, from Mencius); to choose honor over life—some people have be pushed for them to take action—leave office for a high and distant place (idiom); to retire and place oneself above the fray—substitute one's words for the law and abuse power to crush it (idiom); completely lawless behavior—plot and kill sb for his property (idiom); to murder for money—listen to the next chapter for an explanation—classifier for long, narrow, flexible objects such as fish, dogs, pants; for roads and rivers; for human lives; in the expression: one heart, meaning working together for a common goal—classifier for rooms; Cantonese only: for shops, companies—classifier for gusts or bursts; for events of short duration such as lightning, storms, wind—classifier for bagfuls of things, such as flour or cement—classifier for stories of buildings; layers of cakes, paint, thin glass—better go home and weave a net than to stand by the pond longing for fish [idiom.]—classifier for chunks, lumps, or pieces of land, stones, cake, bread, candy, tofu; wristwatches—go to sb. for help or protection—classifier for flat things, such as paper, tables, faces, bows, paintings, tickets, constellations, blankets, bedsheets—try to form friendly ties with sb. for one's own benefit—classifier for food in bowls such as soup, rice, congee, wonton—classifier for wheeled vehicles; such as cars, bicycles—classifier for turns in a game, discussion, or competition—classifier for pairs of objects which naturally come in pairs such as chopsticks or shoes—classifier for people working in the same domain—classifier for heavy objects, such as machines, TVs, computers; theater performances—classifier for objects in a handheld bottle, vial, or flask, such a bottle of water—classifier for groups of people, herds of animals, flocks of birds, schools of fish—classifier for piles of things, such as trash or sand—classifier for objects with protruding top, such as hats, tents—classifier for brief and often sudden actions—classifier for objects attached to or formed in rings, loops or circles—classifier for objects in a small box or case, such as cigarettes, chocolates, mooncakes, cassettes, CDs—classifier for objects in rows such as words—classifier for light fixtures, lamps; teapots—classifier for cans of beverages, such as soda or beer—classifier for sections of plants such as bamboo or sugarcane; tree branches; class periods at school; cylindrical batteries, train carriages—classifier for individual things or people, general, catch-all classifier—classifier for recurring events, often annual, such as conferences, class years in school—classifier for small objects, such as a grain of rice—classifier for groups of domesticated animals like pigs, cows; hair (only with modifier)—classifier for couples; objects in pairs, such as wedding rings, earrings—classifier for objects in a small package or pouch, such as cookies, cigarettes— |