Question 1: What does "chasing" mean in "evicting the enemy"? Pursue. Such as: "chasing", "going with the flow". Tang Lulun and Zhang Pu shot the third of the six poems below: "If you want to drive the Qingqi away, the heavy snow will cover your bow and knife." Drive them away. For example: "Expelled from the country", "Expelled from home", "Expulsion order". To pursue, to pursue. Mandarin Jin proverb 4: "I chase those who are near and far away, and those who are far away are taken in, not for mail." In the Tang Dynasty, after Li Bai's chaotic separation, Tian Enliu Yelang recalled old travel books and cherished them and gave them to Liang Zai, the prefect of Jiangxia Wei, in a poem: "Wandering away from the happiness of the world by mistake, you are quite poor. "Competition, competition." Such as: "competition". Feng Yi Zhuan, Volume 17 of the Book of the Later Han Dynasty: "When the military revolution began and there was a commotion, heroes competed and confused thousands." Follow. Tang Yangfa's poem about broken flowers: "The warm fragrance fades with the sun, and the fragments return with the wind." In order, in order. For example: "increase year by year", "explain item by item".
Question 2: What does expulsion mean? Drive (phonetic: qū gǎn), a Chinese word, is a verb. Its interpretation means to expel and drive away. 1. To drive: to drive a carriage, to hurry up and walk, to tend to run, to be eager to do something, to express a state. 2. To drive away: to force a retreat. Wearing short-sleeved tops when exploring the forest is a wrong decision. Mosquitoes cannot be driven away and are driven away. The most common targets are domestic animals, birds and other animals. Liu Chongyuan of the Southern Tang Dynasty wrote in Volume 2 of "Jinhuazi Miscellaneous Collection": "Suddenly, wild birds flew into the courtyard to kill them, and they gradually gathered on the beams. There was no space for them to perch, and they were no longer afraid of people. The cooks brought food to the hall, plates of food in their hands, They are all being hunted down and cannot be driven away. "Chapter 69 of "The Strange Situation I've Witnessed in Twenty Years": "How can a place like this be tolerated, so there are two reasons to drive him away." Jun. Chapter 4 of Qing's "Tsunami": "The blazing flames are emitting strong light and heat, driving away the darkness and cold."
Question 3: What does expulsion mean? expel is a synonym for expel and is a compound word. Each meaning has the meaning of driving away and driving away
Question 4: What does "expulsion" of a destroyer mean? The description on the first floor is wrong. The English translation of DESTROYER means destroyer, or destroyer, and does not mean to destroy. As mentioned on the second floor, destroyers were large torpedo boats or torpedo boats in the early days, responsible for torpedo attacks and torpedo boat group command ships. In the later period, its functions gradually became diversified, its speed became faster and faster, and its scope of responsibility became wider. In addition to expelling or annihilating the opponent's torpedo boats, gunboats, and speedboats, it was also responsible for expelling the opponent's submarines, aircraft, and even the opponent's destroyers. Warships with this type of function are called destroyers, and they are still used today.
Question 5: What does expulsion mean? Expulsion is synonymous with the plural words expel and zhu both mean to drive away.
Question 6: What is the pronunciation of expulsion from the north? xūn yù means Xiongnu. In the Xia Dynasty, it was called Hun porridge, in the Shang Dynasty, it was called Guifang, in the Zhou Dynasty, it was called Xunxu and Maohuan, and after the Warring States period, it was called Xiongnu. There is a record in "Historical Records? The Chronicles of the Five Emperors" that "Yellow Emperor chased Hun porridge from the north"
Question 7: Basic explanation of expulsion [drive out;expel;banish] drive out or force out illegal immigrants.
Question 8: What does deportation mean? It means that a person is unwelcome in another country and is forcibly driven back to his or her own country by this country.