释义 |
Examples:(in former times) what one is allowed wear depending on social status—save the country in times of danger—(in modern times) the three armed services: Army, Navy and Air Force—ration merchandise (esp. food in times of shortages)—a friend in times of tribulations (idiom); a friend in need is a friend indeed—think of danger in times of safety—(in olden times) an association such as a political party, religious group or trade guild—Mongolian daruqachi, local commander in Mongol and Yuan times—a kind of metal or jade ornament worn in ancient times ward off evil spirits—lit. in the same boat under wind and rain (idiom); fig. stick together in hard times—hunting ground exclusively kept for emperor or nobility (in former times)—reception room for officials (in former times)—lose several times in a row—defy the times and reject custom (idiom); in breach of current conventions—She Xiang (c. 1361-1396), lady who served as Yi ethnic group leader in Yunnan in early Ming times—(in former times) banknote with a value in silver—private school (in former times)—sound the night watches (on clappers or gongs, in former times)—inspector-general of province in Ming and Qing times—part-time work in which one works each day for a half-day, typically a morning or an afternoon—Nanzhao, 8th and 9th century kingdom in Yunnan, at times allied with Tang against Tibetan Tubo pressure—Communist party national congress, in recent times every five years—middle period of a tripartite provincial exam (in former times)—(of officials in imperial times) the highest rank—head ornament (in former times)—Kunqu opera, influential musical theater originating in Kunshan, Jiangsu province in Yuan times—the law of a state (in former times)—an official (in former times)—pausing at the end of a phrase or sentence (in former times, before punctuation marks were used)—(hold a post) several times in succession—in Qing times, refers Western technology, esp. military and naval know-how—escort a criminal under guard (in former times)—court official (in former times)—punctuation of a sentence (in former times, before punctuation marks were used)—silver money (in former times)—foreign languages (in Qing times)—contracted payment (esp. actors' salary in former times)—peasant woman (in former times)—a compendium of documents in various styles, making up the oldest extant texts of Chinese history, from legendary times down the times of Confucius—sell while it's still hot (idiom); fig. in a great hurry to publish or sell (and no time to improve the product)—bamboo writing slips in ancient times (joined together form whole scrolls)—Tang and Song dynasty provincial governor, in Tang times having military and civil authority, but only civil authority in Song—sealed ribbon fastening correspondence (in former times)—(in former times) coming-of-age ceremony at 20 years—(in former times) upper, middle and lower army—Mawei naval base at Fuzhou city (in Qing times)—military skill or technique (in former times)—fig. (of farmers in ancient times) be good-hearted and honest—imperial examinations (in former times)—genuflection, a form of salutation in Qing times performed by men, going down on the right knee and reaching down with the right hand—relay post-horse mail service (in former times)—common term for non-Han peoples in former times, not exclusively derogatory—(in former times) private school—in former times, esp. land tax—robust and prosperous (a compliment in former times)—provisional capital of a country (e.g. in time of war)—lit. rich country, strong army (idiom); slogan of legalist philosophers in pre-Han times—high interest loan (in former times)—a widow (a widow's way of referring herself in former times)—yellow flower (cosmetic powder used on women's forehead in former times)—night watchman (in former times)—scholar preparing for imperial examinations (in former times)— |