释义 |
Examples:"Collection of the Most Important Military Techniques", book published in 1044 during the Northern Song Dynasty—engine displacement (volume of air fuel mixture drawn in during one cycle)—General Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964), US commander in Pacific during WW2, sacked in 1951 by President Truman for exceeding orders during the Korean war—Han Aijing (1945-), notorious red guard leader during Cultural Revolution, spent 15 years in prison for imprisoning and torturing political leaders—educated youth (sent work in farms during cultural revolution)—small state during the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BC) located in the southeast of modern-day Gansu Province—Dwight D. Eisenhower (1890-1969), US army general and politician, Supreme Allied Commander in Europe during World War II, US President 1953-1961—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC) in the southeast of Shandong Province—Japanese Kwantung army (or Kantō army), notorious for numerous atrocities in China during WWII—class division inproletariat and bourgeoisie class enemy, in use esp. during the cultural revolution—Hangu Pass in modern day Henan Province, strategic pass forming the eastern gate of the Qin State during the Warring States Period (770-221 BC)—the Ma clique of warlords in Gansu and Ningxia during the 1930s and 1940s—Japan (used in Taiwan during Japanese colonization)—Peng Dehuai (1898-1974), top communist general, subsequently politician and politburo member, disgraced after attacking Mao's failed policies in 1959, and died after extensive persecution during the Cultural Revolution—social status (in Marxist theory, esp. using during cultural revolution)—small barbarian kingdom in southern China during the Han dynasty—Shu Han (c. 200-263), Liu Bei's kingdom in Sichuan during the Three Kingdoms, claiming legitimacy as successor of Han—Yan'an prefecture level city in Shaanxi, communist headquarters during the war—Three Alls Policy (kill all, burn all, loot all), Japanese policy in China during WWII—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1066-221 BC), located in present day Henan and Hebei Provinces—Bofors, Swedish arms company involved in major corruption case during 1980s—Karl Bernardovich Radek (1995-1939), bolshevik and Comintern leader, first president of Moscow Sun Yat-sen university, died in prison during Stalin's purges—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1066-221 BC) in modern day Shandong Province—Flying Tigers, US airmen in China during World War Two—Lord Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma (1900-1979), British commander in Southeast Asia during WWII, presided over the partition of India in 1947, murdered by the IRA.—Ba state during Zhou dynasty (in east of modern Sichuan)—Xiao Qian (1910-1999), Mongolian-born, Cambridge-educated journalist active during Second World War in Europe, subsequently famous author and translator—person in power taking the capitalist road, a political label often pinned on cadres by the Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution— |