| 辔头 | pèi tóu | bridle | |
| 长辔远驭 | cháng pèi yuǎn yù | to control from a distance (idiom) | |
| 揽辔澄清 | lǎn pèi chéng qīng | to assume one's post with the aspiration of bringing about peace and order to the nation (idiom) |
| 1 | Jane saddled and bridled her favourite horse. | |
| 2 | Napoleon bade him ride at his side and began questioning him. | |
| 3 | The harness was torn and damaged and it was two hours before they were moving, traveling slowly and painfully over the most difficult country that they had been in. | |
| 4 | Ma Lida gave Wen Xiang the larger donkey. The donkey had already been saddled . A bell was tied to the donkey's neck. | |
| 5 | Although the classic definition of DX is "distance", today it generally means contacting amateur radio stations in far-away places. |