释义 |
Examples:nine periods of nine days each after winter solstice, the coldest time of the year—advance or retreat, each has its rules (idiom from Zhuangzi); many translations are possible—lit. each household provided for, enough for the individual (idiom); comfortably off—Chinese set expression, often made up of 4 characters or two couplets of 4 characters each, often alluding a story or historical quotation—each sticks his own opinion (idiom); chacun son gout—chunks obtained by repeatedly cutting a vegetable diagonally and rotating the vegetable after each cut—lit. a pair of mythical birds who depend on each other—bond (esp. document split in two, with each party holding one half)—struggling in the light and fighting in the dark (idiom); fig. intriguing against each other—Each has his likes and dislikes (idiom). There is no accounting for tastes.—"eight wind points", name of a set of acupuncture points (EX-LE-10), four on each foot—part-time work in which one works each day for a half-day, typically a morning or an afternoon—(of relatives or friends) live far apart from each other—fall over each other in their eagerness to...—(of the seasons etc) follow each other cyclically—have a large and sumptuous meal (traditionally on the 1st and 15th of each month)—Longkan Shoujian, Chinese character dictionary from 997 AD containing 26,430 entries, with radicals placed in240 rhyme groups and arranged according to the four tones, and the rest of the characters similarly arranged under each radical—walk a hundred steps after each meal and you will live a long life (proverb)—constant bickering and fighting (idiom); constantly at each other's throats—each trying unload responsibilities onto the other—formal ceremonial music of each succeeding Chinese dynasty starting with the Zhou—each sticks his own version (idiom); a dialogue of the deaf—fixing of farm output quotas for each household—have a smoke after each meal and you will surpass the immortals (proverb)—Diplopoda (arthropod class with a pair of legs on each segment, including centipedes and millipedes)—lit. rubbing shoulders and following in each other's footsteps—fellow sufferers empathize with each other (idiom); misery loves company—each sticks his own view (idiom); a dialogue of the deaf—gunpowder tea, Chinese green tea whose leaves are each formed ina small pellet—with only body and shadow comfort each other [idiom.]—the mountain road twists around each new peak [idiom.]— |