[nok jap malaēng sī nāmtān] (n, exp) EN: Asian Brown FlycatcherFR: Gobemouche brun [ m ] ; Gobemouche marron [ m ] ; Gobemouche de Daourie [ m ] ; Gobe-mouches à large bec [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng klaēp lang muang dam] (n, exp) EN: Purple-backed StarlingFR: Étourneau de Daourie [ m ] ; Martin à dos pourpré [ m ] ; Martin dominicain [ m ]
(n)United States physicist (born in China) who collaborated with Yang Chen Ning in disproving the principle of conservation of parity (born in 1926), Syn.Tsung Dao Lee
(n)philosophical system developed by Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu advocating a simple honest life and noninterference with the course of natural events, Syn.Daoism
[道, dào, ㄉㄠˋ]direction; way; method; road; path; classifier for long thin stretches, rivers, roads etc; principle; truth; morality; reason; skill; method; Dao (of Daoism); to say; to speak; to talk#123[Add to Longdo]
[倒, dǎo, ㄉㄠˇ]to fall; to collapse; to topple; to fail; to go bankrupt; to change (trains or buses); to move around; to sell; to speculate (buying and selling, also 搗|捣); profiteer#1009[Add to Longdo]
[かけごえだおれ, kakegoedaore](n) starting with vigor but ending with no action; raising one's voice (in a call to action) and then failing to take action[Add to Longdo]
[きょうのきだおれ, kyounokidaore](exp) (See 大阪の食い倒れ, 着倒れ) financially ruining oneself by buying too many clothes (as a fabled tendency of the people of Kyoto)[Add to Longdo]
[ごとべいどう, gotobeidou](n) (See 天師道) Way of the Five Pecks of Rice (ancient Chinese Daoist movement later known as The Way of the Celestial Masters)[Add to Longdo]
[おおさかのくいだおれ, oosakanokuidaore](exp) (See 京の着倒れ, 食い倒れ) financially ruining oneself by overindulging in food and drink (as a fabled tendency of the people of Osaka)[Add to Longdo]
[てんしどう, tenshidou](n) (See 五斗米道) Way of the Celestial Masters (ancient Chinese Daoist movement orig. known as The Way of the Five Pecks of Rice)[Add to Longdo]