释义 |
Examples:shed tears of gratitude (idiom); moved to tears—a home where the kids have grown up and moved out—(Buddhism) be moved at the sight of good deeds—(in Taiwan) Han Chinese people other than those who moved Taiwan from mainland China after 1945 and their descendants—Wang Ming (1904-1974), Soviet trained Chinese communist, Comintern and Soviet stooge and left adventurist in the 1930s, fell out with Mao and moved Soviet Union from 1956—a foot's move sways the balance (idiom); hold the balance of power—consider (the best move, how to find a way etc)—a very brief period of time (lit. the time it takes for a shadow move an inch)—rooted the spot (idiom); too terrified to move—pass like thunder and move like the wind (idiom); swift and decisive reaction—change of string, move out of rut (idiom); dramatic change of direction—before the troops move, fodder and provisions go first (idiom); logistics comes before military maneuvers—strike first and gain the upper hand (idiom, martial arts term); Making the first move is an advantage.—hesitate over what move to make (idiom); to waver—one move, two gains (idiom); two birds with one stone—lit. on the beat, move apart; fig. break-up (of marriage or business partners)—never move your four limbs, can't distinguish the five crops (idiom); living as a parasite—move an army and send a general (idiom); to deploy an army—lit. the cycle comes back the start (idiom); to move in circles—lit. the goose comes, the swallow goes (idiom); fig. always on the move—move the tiger from the mountain (idiom); to lure an opponent out by a stratagem—lit. lift a hand or move a leg (idiom); very easy—when things reach an extreme, they can only move in the opposite direction [idiom.]—One careless move and the whole game is lost. [idiom.]— |