释义 |
Examples:light as a goose feather, heavy as Mt Tai (idiom); of no consequence one person, a matter of life or death to another—hear what he says and observe what he does (idiom, from Analects); judge a person not by his words, but by his actions—fig. a talented person chooses a patron of integrity—be sentimentally attached to (a person or place)—the God of Thunder strikes bean curd, a bully picks the weakest person—using a talented person in an insignificant position—elderly person whose birthday is being celebrated—person (first person, second person etc in grammar)—lit. bird wounded by an arrow (idiom); fig. wounded or damaged person—present different views on a historical person or verdict—(name of a person) Bai Suzhen, from Madame White Snake—a really determined person will find a solution (idiom); where there's a will, there's a way—person who performs the libation before a banquet—one's thoughts fly a longed-for place or person—person leading unconventional lifestyle, esp. in western intellectual or artistic circles—the emperor relatives (idiom); person with powerful connections—person hired lure customers to high-priced restaurants—person or state having great power and influence—The person on the spot is baffled, the onlooker sees clear (idiom). The onlooker sees more of the game.—"mercenary expert", a person who is supposedly an independent expert, but receives payment for making comments favorable a particular entity—lit. a tall tree attracts the wind (idiom); a famous person attract criticism—prefix used before the surname of a person or a numeral indicating the order of birth of the children in a family or indicate affection or familiarity—person who scales the outer walls of a building as a stunt or for building maintenance—person who writes articles - newspapers, magazines, blogs (informal)—celebrity, esp. distinguished literary person having no official post—person with a particular undesirable characteristic—stereotypical Taiwanese person (often derogatory)—northerner, person from Northern China (Cantonese)—marginal man (term coined by social psychologist Kurt Lewin, referring a person in transition between two cultures or social groups, not fully belonging to either)—original calligraphy or painting of famous person—person in power taking the capitalist road, a political label often pinned on cadres by the Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution— |