释义 |
foreigners noun, plural—外国 n (almost always used) 外国人 pl (almost always used) Examples:concerning foreigners or foreign affairs—use foreigners to subdue foreigners (idiom); let the barbarians fight it out among themselves (traditional policy of successive dynasties)—Be careful not trust foreigners.—the First Emperor's order expel the foreigners—feel animosity toward (the wealthy, foreigners etc)—revere everything foreign and pander to overseas powers (idiom); blind worship of foreign goods and ideas—feel animosity toward foreigners or outsiders—speak with a foreign accent or using words from a foreign language (usually derogatory) [idiom.]—the three foreign religions (Nestorianism, Manicheanism and Zoroastrianism)—In modernizing the country, don't accept uncritically all foreign ideas.—CPC central committee's external affairs department (i.e. Chinese communist party's foreign office)—Employment Stability Fee (Taiwan), a minimum monthly fee for employing foreign workers—summon (an envoy of a foreign country) an interview—Kim Yong-nam (1928-), North Korean politician, foreign minister 1983-1998 and president of Supreme people's assembly from 1998 (nominal head of state and described as deputy leader)—Gustav Stresemann (Chancellor and Foreign Minister during the Weimar Republic)—Chinese People's Association For Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC)—Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation (MOFTEC)—the foreign learning or Westernizing faction in the late Qing—persons of Chinese origin having foreign citizenship—policeman (in China's former foreign concessions)—combining native and foreign methods (idiom); sophisticated and many-sided—used as translation for foreign leaders, e.g. Indian Rajah or Arab Sheik or Emir—Joe Biden (1942-), US democrat politician, senator for Delaware from 1972, several times chair of Senate foreign relations committee, vice-president of USA from 2009—economically independent (of state aid, foreign subsidy etc)—KOMURA Masahiko (1942-), Japanese politician, foreign minister from 1998, minister of defense from 2007—the Qing dynasty equivalent of the Foreign Office—company established in mainland China with direct investment from foreign entities or from investors in Taiwan, Macao or Hong Kong—Shen Guofang (1952-), foreign affairs official (PRC)—foreign lands and places (idiom); living as expatriate—evacuate (e.g. foreign civilians from a war zone)—Kim KyeGwan 김계관 (1943-), North Korean diplomat, vice-foreign minister of—phagocytosis (ingesting and destroying foreign matter)—the Shanghai of old, with its foreign settlements—Yang Jiechi (1950-), Chinese politician and diplomat, foreign minister of PRC from 2007—Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) (form of legal entity in China)—Radosław Sikorski (1950-), Polish conservative politician, foreign minister of Poland from 2007—Ming dynasty record (1574) of exploration and foreign relations—Council on Foreign Relations (US policy think thank)—resist foreign aggression and pacify the interior of the country [idiom.]— |