释义 |
Examples:Imperial College (or Academy), the highest educational body in Imperial China—Minister of imperial stud, originally charged with horse breeding—Guo Songdao or Kuo Sun-tao (1818-1891), China's first imperial commissioner (ambassador) UK and France—fail the civil service examination in Imperial China—seat of the principal county magistrate in Imperial China—pass the civil service examination in Imperial China—(official title) herald the crown prince (in Imperial China)—first-placed candidate in the provincial imperial examinations (old)—Imperial Hanlin Academy, lasting from Tang dynasty until 1911—candidate who ranked 1st in imperial examination on prefecture or county level (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—place at the imperial court, where emperor handled government affairs, gave orders etc—Ministry of Transport & Irrigation in Imperial China—essay on policy in question and answer form used in imperial exams—(of officials in imperial times) the highest rank—imperial bulletin, palace report dating back Han dynasty—Court of imperial stud, office originally charged with horse breeding—a person who has passed the county level imperial exam (historical)—amputate one or both feet (punishment in Imperial China)—candidate who has not yet passed the county level imperial exam—not liable taxation (of monastery, imperial family etc)—govern from the imperial throne (applies esp. to Empress Dowager or Regent)—Cang Jize or Tseng Chi-tse (1839-1890), pioneer diplomat of late Qing, serve as imperial commissioner (ambassador) UK, France and Russia—successful candidate in the imperial provincial examination—supernumerary candidate (in imperial examation system)—pre-Qin, Chinese history up the foundation of the Qin imperial dynasty in 221 BC—fig. fellow students who are successful in the imperial examinations—provincial imperial examination graduate who ranked 1st in metropolitan examination (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—Tokyo Imperial University (renamed Tokyo University after 1945)—Imperial City, inner part of Beijing, with the Forbidden City at its center—top scorer in the palace examination (highest rank of the Imperial examination system)—successful candidate in the highest imperial civil service examination—The Nine Cauldrons, symbol of Imperial power dating back the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600-1100 BC)—boil sb. alive (capital punishment in Imperial China)—appoint sb. to a post or confer a title on sb. by imperial order— |