摩洛哥
Mó luò gē
Pinyin

Definition

摩洛哥
 - 
Mó luò gē
  1. Morocco

Character Decomposition

Related Words (20)

  1. 1 elder brother
gē men
  1. 1 Brothers!
  2. 2 brethren
  3. 3 dude (colloquial)
  4. 4 brother (diminutive form of address between males)
gē ge
  1. 1 older brother
  2. 2 CL:個|个[gè],位[wèi]
dà gē
  1. 1 eldest brother
  2. 2 big brother (polite address for a man of about the same age as oneself)
  3. 3 gang leader
  4. 4 boss
shuài gē
  1. 1 handsome guy
  2. 2 lady-killer
  3. 3 handsome (form of address)
àn mó
  1. 1 massage
  2. 2 to massage
mó kǎ
  1. 1 mocha (loanword)
Mó jié zuò
  1. 1 Capricornus
Fú ěr mó sī
  1. 1 Sherlock Holmes, 歇洛克·福爾摩斯|歇洛克·福尔摩斯[Xiē luò kè · Fú ěr mó sī]
èr gē
  1. 1 second brother
Wěi gē
  1. 1 Viagra (male impotence drug)
gē men r5
  1. 1 erhua variant of 哥們|哥们[gē men]
Gē lún bǐ yà
  1. 1 Colombia
  2. 2 Columbia (District of, or University etc)
táng gē
  1. 1 older male patrilineal cousin
Mò xī gē
  1. 1 Mexico
Xià luò kè
  1. 1 Shylock (in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice)
  2. 2 Sherlock (name)
dà gē dà
  1. 1 cell phone (bulky, early-model one)
  2. 2 brick phone
  3. 3 mob boss
Xú Zhì mó
  1. 1 Xu Zhimo (1897-1931), writer and poet
chuǎi mó
  1. 1 to analyze
  2. 2 to try to figure out
  3. 3 to try to fathom
mó tiān
  1. 1 skyscraping
  2. 2 towering into the sky

Idioms (3)

摩拳擦掌
mó quán cā zhǎng
  1. 1 fig. to rub one's fists and wipe one's palms (idiom)
  2. 2 to roll up one's sleeves for battle
  3. 3 eager to get into action or start on a task
摩顶放踵
mó dǐng fàng zhǒng
  1. 1 to rub one's head and heels (idiom); to slave for the benefit of others
  2. 2 to wear oneself out for the general good
洛阳纸贵
Luò yáng zhǐ guì
  1. 1 lit. paper has become expensive in Luoyang (because everyone is making a copy of a popular story) (idiom)
  2. 2 fig. (of a product) to sell like hotcakes

Sample Sentences

中国唐宋元时期,陆上和海上丝绸之路同步发展,中国、意大利、摩洛哥的旅行家杜环马可波罗、伊本白图泰都在陆上和海上丝绸之路留下了历史印记。15世纪初的明代,中国著名航海家郑和七次远洋航海,留下千古佳话。
Zhōngguó Táng Sòng Yuán shíqī ,lùshàng hé hǎishàng SīchóuzhīLù tóngbù fāzhǎn ,Zhōngguó 、Yìdàlì 、Móluògē de lǚxíngjiā Dùhuán MǎkěBōluó 、Yīběnbáitútài dōu zài lùshàng hé hǎishàng SīchóuzhīLù liúxià le lìshǐ yìnjì 。15 shìjì chū de Míngdài ,Zhōngguó zhùmíng hánghǎijiā ZhèngHé qī cì yuǎnyáng hánghǎi ,liúxià qiāngǔjiāhuà 。
In China’s Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties, during the synchronous development of the Silk Road and the Maritime Silk Road, Chinese, Italian and Moroccan explorers Du Huan, Marco Polo and Ibn Battut, all left traces in the history of the Silk Road and the Maritime Silk Road. During the Ming Dynasty at the start of the 15th Century, the famous Chinese navigator Zheng He went on seven distant voyages, leaving behind legendary tales.