叟 | sǒu | old gentleman / old man | ||
Approximate Results for 叟 | ||||
老叟 | lǎo sǒu | old man | ||
乔叟 | Qiáo sǒu | Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400), English poet, author of The Canterbury Tales 坎特伯雷故事集[Kan3 te4 bo2 lei2 Gu4 shi4 Ji2] | ||
北叟失马 | běi sǒu shī mǎ | lit. the old man lost his horse, but it all turned out for the best (idiom) / fig. a blessing in disguise / it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good | ||
童叟无欺 | tóng sǒu wú qī | cheating neither old nor young (idiom) / treating youngsters and old folk equally scrupulously / Our house offers sincere treatment to all and fair trade to old and young alike. | ||
野叟曝言 | Yě sǒu Pù yán | Yesou Puyan or Humble Words of a Rustic Elder, monumental Qing novel by Xia Jingqu 夏敬渠[Xia4 Jing4 qu2] | ||
杰弗里乔叟 | Jié fú lǐ Qiáo sǒu | Geoffrey Chaucer (English author) | ||
杰弗里・乔叟 | Jié fú lǐ · Qiáo sǒu | Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400), English poet, author of The Canterbury Tales 坎特伯雷故事集[Kan3 te4 bo2 lei2 Gu4 shi4 Ji2] | ||
杰弗里·乔叟 | Jié fú lǐ · Qiáo sǒu | Geoffrey Chaucer (1343-1400), English poet, author of The Canterbury Tales 坎特伯雷故事集[Kan3 te4 bo2 lei2 Gu4 shi4 Ji2] |