打字猴:1.705034181e+09
1705034181
1705034182 bales, packages of merchandise usually done up in canvas and corded or metal-hooped.
1705034183
1705034184 agreeable picks up the word pleasing in the second line of the first paragraph.
1705034185
1705034186 padi .Paddy is the more usual English form of this word, but padi is the correct Malay form.Padi is the Malay for rice , whether growing or cut, whether in the straw or in the husk. By extension, especially in the adjectival use, the word has come to mean rice in general.
1705034187
1705034188 good-natured, inclined to please or to be pleased.
1705034189
1705034190 frank, undisguised; open; outspoken; sincere; candid.
1705034191
1705034192 drilled into you, taught repeatedly to you; told time and again to you; disciplined into you.
1705034193
1705034194 oriental, the Chinese, the Japanese, the Koreans, and others of the Far East or the Orient. The Orient is the place where the sun rises, in the east.
1705034195
1705034196 inscrutable, wholly mysterious, incapable of being penetrated or searched into or understood; incomprehensible; not given to expressing their emotions frankly or candidly. The Occidentals or foreigners from the West generally regard us Orientals of the East as a race of people who do not show our emotions on our faces and are therefore inscrutable or not easily understood by them.
1705034197
1705034198 banyan tree, an East Indian moraceous tree, the branches of which send out numerous aërial roots that grow down to the soil and form props or additional trunks, often until a single tree covers so large an area that it will shelter thousands of men; so called by the British in allusion to the use of the space sheltered by the tree as a market-place by the native merchants, or banians.
1705034199
1705034200 wayside shrine, a small place of worship by the side of the road.
1705034201
1705034202 absurd, silly; weak-minded; foolish.
1705034203
1705034204 old residents, foreigners who have lived in our country for many years. Sometimes they are called Old China Hands, although, strictly speaking, the term ought to apply to business men who have been here for a long time.
1705034205
1705034206 with a tolerant shrug of the shoulders, as if you had said something that was absolutely wrong, but that they were making allowances for your being a newcomer to China, and were going through all this bother, really unnecessary bother, of getting you to see the truth of the whole matter.
1705034207
1705034208 yoke, a frame fitted to a person’s shoulders and back for the carrying of heavy packs; also a pole used for the carrying of suspended baskets.
1705034209
1705034210 staggering, tottering, swaying, unable to remain steady in walking and standing, because of the heavy loads they were carrying.
1705034211
1705034212 wears on, continues on and on; drags on.
1705034213
1705034214 stripped to the waist, naked, without any covering, from head to waist.
1705034215
1705034216 crouched, bent low or stooped over, with bent legs.
1705034217
1705034218 out-patients’ room of a hospital, the room in a hospital where the out-patients (outside patients; sick persons who do not live or remain in the hospital) receive treatment.
1705034219
1705034220 distressing, causing severe physical or mental strain to the onlooker.
1705034221
1705034222 scars, marks remaining on the body after the wounds or ulcers have been healed.
1705034223
1705034224 open sores, places where the skin and flesh are ruptured, broken apart, bruised, or diseased, so as to be open to view.
1705034225
1705034226 bandages, flexible strips of cloth used in wrapping up wounds.
1705034227
1705034228 dressing, treatment of a wound with remedies, bandages, and other things.
1705034229
1705034230 the wood of the pole.
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