释义 |
Examples:(in the Romanization of Chinese) write two or more syllables together as a single word (not separated by spaces)—lit. want sth in haste, but cannot get there (idiom, from Analects); more haste, less speed—old age (in one's 80s, 90s, or more)—technical word used in psychology meaning the whole is more than the sum of its parts—theist (believer in one or more Deities)—household with savings or annual income of 10,000 yuan or more (considered a large amount in the 1970s, when the term became established)—join things together by fixing them in place at one or more points—the name does not reflect the reality (idiom); more in name than in fact—I have much more say than can be written in this letter (conventional letter ending) [idiom.]— |