释义 |
Examples:the old man lost his mare, but it all turned out for the best (idiom); fig. a blessing in disguise—man at birth is fundamentally good in nature—a true man has the courage accept the consequences of his actions—Once one man gets a government position, all his cronies get in too—listening the words of a wise man can be superior to studying ten years of books—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).—Eugene Cernan (1934-), US astronaut in Apollo 10 and Apollo 17 missions, "last man on the moon"—Yip Man (1893-1972), martial arts practitioner, master of Bruce Lee—ancient hominid species such as Homo erectus, Neanderthal man etc—one must be a man of his word and resolute in his work (proverb)—Ahmed Shah Massoud (1953-2001), Tajik Afghan engineer, military man and anti-Taleban leader—Zeng Guofan (1811-1872), Qing dynasty politician and military man—man (i.e. manly, masculine)—Isle of Man, British Isles (Taiwanese usage)—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).—figure (man or God) worshipped by a religious sect—the rich man cannot be benevolent (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).—rem (Röntgen equivalent man, an old unit of radiation damage now replaced by the Sievert)—Man has but one life, grass but one spring (idiom). fig. the brevity of human existence—polite address for an elderly man, or a woman's father-in-law—men fear getting inthe wrong line of business, women fear marrying the wrong man (proverb)—be particularly attentive to (an attractive young lady or man etc)—house acquired indirectly through a middle-man—term of respect for a man of about the same age—Every man for himself, and the Devil take the hindmost.—General Wei Chigong (585-658), famous military man instrumental in founding the Tang dynasty—man can conquer nature (idiom); human wisdom can prevail over nature—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)—give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man fish and you feed him for a lifetime—the man of the moment (idiom); a prominent personality—Ban Chao (33-102), noted Han diplomat and military man— |