释义 |
Examples:moving average index (used in financial analysis)—aim in front of a moving target—stuck and not moving forward (idiom); stagnant—congratulations on house-moving or promotion (idiom); Best wishes for your new home!—moving average (in financial analysis)—profound, thorough and moving—slow-moving (product, inventory etc)—pull oneself up onto a moving vehicle—hold back one's troops without moving (idiom); to bide one's time—difficulty (esp. in moving)—lit. you can sing or you can cry (idiom); fig. deeply moving—like rowing a boat upstream, if you stop moving forward you fall back [idiom.]—lit. moving clouds and flowing water [idiom.]—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.]— |