释义 |
Examples:resolute and upright in character—Orochimaru, character in the Narumanga series—Aladdin, character in one of the tales in the The Book of One Thousand and One Nights—main character in a novel etc—string (as in 'character string')—new character (in textbook)—four-square box in which one practices writing a Chinese character—the key or radical by which a character is arranged in a traditional Chinese dictionary—Zhonghua Zihai, the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionary with 85,568 entries, compiled in 1994—character (in a play, novel etc)—UCS, Chinese character coding adopted in PRC 1986—character used in Taiwan as a substitute for a real name (like "X" in English)—square box character (in Chinese text) indicating illegible character—(phonetic character used in transliteration of foreign names)—the Kangxi Dictionary, named after the Kangxi Emperor, who in 1710 ordered its compilation, containing 47,035 single-character entries—old character used in female names—Huang Xin, character in The Water Margin—Longkan Shoujian, Chinese character dictionary from 997 AD containing 26,430 entries, with radicals placed in240 rhyme groups and arranged according to the four tones, and the rest of the characters similarly arranged under each radical—character used in traditional phonetics indicate value of rhyme—Zihui, Chinese character dictionary with 33,179 entries, released in 17th century—originally a theatrical device in which a character explains his own role—Winnie-the-Pooh (bear character in children's stories by A. A. Milne adapted by Disney)—Flying Snow, a character in "Hero"—in classical Chinese, first character of phrase having auxiliary grammatical function—Three character classic, a 13th century reading primer consisting of Confucian tenets in lines of 3 characters—CNS 11643, Chinese character coding adopted in Taiwan, 1986-1992—Jiyun, Chinese rime dictionary with 53,525 single-character entries, published in 11th century—Wang Ying (character in the "Water Margin")—another name for traditional Chinese character (mainly in Taiwan)—Shenglei, the earliest Chinese rime dictionary with 11,520 single-character entries, released in 3rd century (was not preserved this day)—alternate term for Traditional Chinese character, used in Taiwan—be lacking in human character—chorus (as a subsidiary character in a play)—character used in place names— |