俘虏 | fú lǔ | captive | |
战俘 | zhàn fú | prisoner of war | |
俘获 | fú huò | to capture (enemy property or personnel); capture (physics: absorption of subatomic particle by an atom or nucleus) | |
捕俘 | bǔ fú | to capture enemy personnel (for intelligence purposes) | |
伤俘 | shāng fú | wounded and captured |
1 | It is a total capture solution to save you time and boost productivity. | |
2 | Did he not invade Iraq on trumped-up charges, bend America' s laws and values to permit the torture of prisoners, and leave his successor the worst economic crisis since the 1930s? | |
3 | I was captured by the beauty of the subject. Every concept seemed alive: a triumph of imagination, intuition and intelligence. | |
4 | These results have given the experimental data for the fulgides to be used in the optical information processing. | |
5 | But China will not easily capture hearts and minds. The Chinese are ethnocentric. In large ways and small, an instinct to narrowly defend interests can be off putting |