释义 |
Examples:you can run this time, but you'll have come back—enumerate what is black and yellow (idiom); to criticize sb behind his back to incite quarrels—Taku Forts, maritime defense works in Tianjin dating back the Ming dynasty, playing a prominent role during the Opium Wars (1839-1860)—consonants zh, ch, sh, r produced on the back of the tongue—Treaty of Saint Petersburg of 1881, whereby Russia handed back Yili province Qing China in exchange for compensation payment and unequal treaty rights—storytelling dramatic art dating back Song and Yuan periods, single narrator without music, often historical topics with commentary—lit. wool comes from the sheep's back (idiom); One gets the benefit, but the price has been paid.—invert (upside-down, inside-out, back-to-front, white to black etc)—stand still without advancing (idiom); to hesitate and hold back—percussion instrument shaped as a hollow wooden tiger, with serrated strip across the back, across which one runs a drumstick—with back the mountain and facing the water (favored location)—return to the main topic (idiom); back to business—imperial bulletin, palace report dating back Han dynasty—bind a person's upper body, with arms tied behind the back and rope looped around the neck—Koryo Seonggyungwan, university dating back Korean Goryeo dynasty, in Gaesong, North Korea—trapezius muscle (of the upper back and neck)—four legs facing the sky (idiom); flat on one's back—lit. the cycle comes back the start (idiom); to move in circles—seek common ground while holding back differences (idiom); to agree to differ—back where we were (idiom); absolutely no improvement—strangle and slap the back (idiom); fig. to occupy a strategic post—the wrong way round (back-to-front, inside out etc)—massage sb's back by pounding it lightly with one's fists—lit. a good horse doesn't come back the same pasture [idiom.]— |