商贾 | shāng gǔ | merchant | |
富商大贾 | fù shāng dà gǔ | tycoon; magnate | |
余勇可贾 | yú yǒng kě gǔ | lit. spare valor for sale (idiom); fig. after former successes, still ready for more work; not resting on one's laurels | |
贾客 | gǔ kè | merchant (old) | |
富商巨贾 | fù shāng jù gǔ | tycoon; magnate |
内贾德 | nèi jiǎ dé | Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (1956-), Iranian fundamentalist politician, president of Iran 2005-2013; abbr. for 艾哈迈迪内贾德 | |
拉夫桑贾尼 | lā fū sāng jiǎ ní | Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani | |
佩鲁贾 | pèi lǔ jiǎ | Perugia (city in Italy) | |
里贾纳 | lǐ jiǎ nà | Regina city, capital of Saskatchewan province, Canada | |
拉贾斯坦邦 | lā jiǎ sī tǎn bāng | Rajasthan (state in India) |
1 | "They get public financial support, their staff is paid by the government and their function is to serve as an agency of the government, " Ms. Jia said. | |
2 | "Every girl wants a romantic wedding, but happiness is more important than anything else," says Jia. "I just want the two of us to be together. | |
3 | In general, only the Red Cross and a smaller government organization, the Chinese Charity Federation, can ask for public donations, Ms. Jia said. | |
4 | In general, only the Red Cross and a smaller government organization, the Chinese Charity Federation, can ask for public donations, Ms. Jia said. | |
5 | "They get public financial support, their staff is paid by the government and their function is to serve as an agency of the government, " Ms. Jia said. |