全集
quán jí
Pinyin

Definition

全集
 - 
quán jí
  1. omnibus
  2. complete works (of a writer or artist)

Character Decomposition

Related Words (20)

Quán
  1. 1 surname Quan
quán bù
  1. 1 whole
  2. 2 entire
  3. 3 complete
ān quán
  1. 1 safe
  2. 2 secure
  3. 3 safety
  4. 4 security
wán quán
  1. 1 complete
  2. 2 whole
  3. 3 totally
  4. 4 entirely
  1. 1 to gather
  2. 2 to collect
  3. 3 collected works
  4. 4 classifier for sections of a TV series etc: episode
jiāo jí
  1. 1 intersection (symbol ∩) (set theory)
jiàn quán
  1. 1 robust
  2. 2 sound
quán lì
  1. 1 with all one's strength
  2. 2 full strength
  3. 3 all-out (effort)
  4. 4 fully (support)
quán lì yǐ fù
  1. 1 to do at all costs
  2. 2 to make an all-out effort
quán chéng
  1. 1 whole city
quán xīn quán yì
  1. 1 heart and soul
  2. 2 wholeheartedly
quán xīn
  1. 1 all new
  2. 2 completely new
quán fāng wèi
  1. 1 all around
  2. 2 omnidirectional
  3. 3 complete
  4. 4 holistic
  5. 5 comprehensive
quán mín
  1. 1 entire population (of a country)
quán rán
  1. 1 completely
quán qiú
  1. 1 entire
  2. 2 total
  3. 3 global
  4. 4 the (whole) world
  5. 5 worldwide
quán shèng
  1. 1 flourishing
  2. 2 at the peak
  3. 3 in full bloom
quán chéng
  1. 1 the whole distance
  2. 2 from beginning to end
quán zhí
  1. 1 full-time job
quán néng
  1. 1 omnipotent
  2. 2 all-round
  3. 3 strong in every area

Idioms (20)

五味俱全
wǔ wèi jù quán
  1. 1 a complete gamut of all five flavors (idiom); every flavor under the sun
全民皆兵
quán mín jiē bīng
  1. 1 to bring the entire nation to arms (idiom)
全神贯注
quán shén guàn zhù
  1. 1 to concentrate one's attention completely (idiom)
  2. 2 with rapt attention
全军覆没
quán jūn fù mò
  1. 1 total defeat of an army (idiom); fig. a complete wipeout
全党全军
quán dǎng quán jūn
  1. 1 the (communist) party and the army together (idiom)
两全其美
liǎng quán qí měi
  1. 1 to satisfy rival demands (idiom)
  2. 2 to get the best of both worlds
  3. 3 to have it both ways
  4. 4 to have one's cake and eat it too
十全十美
shí quán shí měi
  1. 1 complete and beautiful
  2. 2 to be perfect (idiom)
大获全胜
dà huò quán shèng
  1. 1 to seize total victory (idiom); an overwhelming victory
  2. 2 to win by a landslide (in election)
宁为玉碎,不为瓦全
nìng wéi yù suì , bù wéi wǎ quán
  1. 1 Better broken jade than intact tile.
  2. 2 Death is preferable to dishonor. (idiom)
少女露笑脸,婚事半成全
shào nu:3 lù xiào liǎn , hūn shì bàn chéng quán
  1. 1 When the girl smiles, the matchmaker's job is half done. (idiom)
才貌双全
cái mào shuāng quán
  1. 1 talented and good-looking (idiom)
文武双全
wén wǔ shuāng quán
  1. 1 well versed in letters and military technology (idiom); fine scholar and soldier
  2. 2 master of pen and sword
求全责备
qiú quán zé bèi
  1. 1 to demand perfection (idiom)
牡丹虽好,全仗绿叶扶
mǔ dan suī hǎo , quán zhàng lu:4 yè fú
  1. 1 Although the peony is beautiful, it depends entirely on help from the green leaves (idiom). However brilliant you may be, you can't do anything without support from others.
牡丹虽好,全仗绿叶扶持
mǔ dan suī hǎo , quán zhàng lu:4 yè fú chí
  1. 1 Although the peony is beautiful, it depends entirely on help from the green leaves (idiom). However brilliant you may be, you can't do anything without support from others.
牡丹虽好,全凭绿叶扶持
mǔ dan suī hǎo , quán píng lu:4 yè fú chí
  1. 1 Although the peony is beautiful, it depends entirely on help from the green leaves (idiom). However brilliant you may be, you can't do anything without support from others.
目无全牛
mù wú quán niú
  1. 1 to see the ox already cut up into joints (idiom); extremely skilled
  2. 2 able to see through the problem at one glance
秀才不出门,全知天下事
xiù cai bù chū mén , quán zhī tiān xià shì
  1. 1 a learned person need not leave his home to know what's going on in the world (idiom)
竭尽全力
jié jìn quán lì
  1. 1 to spare no effort (idiom); to do one's utmost
与全世界为敌
yǔ quán shì jiè wéi dí
  1. 1 to fight the whole world (idiom)

Sample Sentences

小学时候我们班就有三类人:“仙人”就是那种看各种高端怪书的奇葩(比如卡尔维诺的《宇宙奇趣全集》);“完人”这种人会跳舞会唱歌会主持节目会各种乐器,还奥数好英语好钢琴八级;还有一种人没啥当,只好当“井货”(横竖都是二)。
xiǎoxué shíhou wǒmen bān jiù yǒu sān lèi rén :“xiānrén ”jiùshì nàzhǒng kàn gèzhǒng gāoduān guài shū de qípā (bǐrú kǎ ěr wéi nuò de 《yǔzhòu qíqù quánjí 》);“wánrén ”zhèzhǒng rén huì tiàowǔ huì chànggē huì zhǔchí jiémù huì gèzhǒng yuèqì ,hái ÀoShù hǎo Yīngyǔ hǎo gāngqín bā jí ;háiyǒu yīzhǒng rén méi shá dāng ,zhǐhǎo dāng “jǐng huò ”(héngshu dōu shì èr )。
There were three kinds of people in my elementary school: the Merlin - nerds who read all kinds of wired high-end books (like Calvino’s Trolltech Universe Collection); the Paragon - the kids who could sing, dance, host games, play instruments, were good at all subjects, and could play piano like a professional; what was left were those kids who couldn’t be either, so they could only be “lol"s (It is lol either way).