戎装 | róng zhuāng | martial attire | |
戎马 | róng mǎ | military horse; by extension, military matters | |
兵戎相见 | bīng róng xiāng jiàn | to meet on the battlefield (idiom) | |
投笔从戎 | tóu bǐ cóng róng | to lay down the pen and take up the sword (idiom); to join the military (esp. of educated person) | |
从戎 | cóng róng | to enlist; to be in the army |
1 | Marty Baron is one of the great journalists of this era. | |
2 | Once a year, the ballet dancer-goldsmith si ts on a trone set 5 meters high, in order to create spe ical ring, to be given to a special person. | |
3 | A simulated low-speed crash between comparably sized planetoids yields a Pluto and a Charon, plus an icy debris disk that could coalesce into a Nix and a Hydra. | |
4 | Eight hundred years ago, Chinese troops bailed out Khmer kings; friendly Chinese warriors are carved on the side of the famed 12th-century Bayon temple near Angkor Wat. | |
5 | Building on the family' s long military legacy, Jim, 20, is a private first class in the U.S. Marine Corps, and he recently returned from serving in Iraq. |