夏娃
Xià wá
Pinyin

Definition

夏娃
 - 
Xià wá
  1. Eve (in Protestant versions of the Bible) (from Hebrew Ḥawwāh, probably via Cantonese 夏娃 {Haa6waā})

Character Decomposition

Related Words (20)

Xià
  1. 1 the Xia or Hsia dynasty c. 2000 BC
  2. 2 Xia of the Sixteen Kingdoms (407-432)
  3. 3 surname Xia
xià tiān
  1. 1 summer
  2. 2 CL:個|个[gè]
wá wa
  1. 1 baby
  2. 2 small child
  3. 3 doll
Xià wēi yí
  1. 1 Hawaii, US state
Xià wá
  1. 1 Eve (in Protestant versions of the Bible) (from Hebrew Ḥawwāh, probably via Cantonese 夏娃 {Haa6waā})
xià jì
  1. 1 summer
xià rì
  1. 1 summertime
Xià hé
  1. 1 Xiahe county in Gannan Tibetan autonomous prefecture 甘南藏族自治州[Gān nán Zàng zú zì zhì zhōu], Gansu, formerly Amdo province of Tibet
Xià luò kè
  1. 1 Shylock (in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice)
  2. 2 Sherlock (name)
  1. 1 baby
  2. 2 doll
wá ér
  1. 1 children (colloquial)
wá wa liǎn
  1. 1 baby face
  2. 2 doll face
wá zi
  1. 1 baby
  2. 2 small child
  3. 3 (arch.) slave among ethnic minorities
Níng xià
  1. 1 Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, abbr. 寧|宁[Níng], capital Yinchuan 銀川|银川[Yín chuān]
bù wá wa
  1. 1 rag doll
chūn xià qiū dōng
  1. 1 the four seasons
  2. 2 spring, summer, autumn and winter
yáng wá wa
  1. 1 doll (of Western appearance)
shèng xià
  1. 1 midsummer
  2. 2 the height of summer
Huá xià
  1. 1 old name for China
  2. 2 Cathay
zhòng xià
  1. 1 midsummer
  2. 2 second month of summer

Idioms (2)

夏虫不可以语冰
xià chóng bù kě yǐ yǔ bīng
  1. 1 a summer insect cannot discuss ice (idiom)
春生,夏长,秋收,冬藏
chūn shēng , xià zhǎng , qiū shōu , dōng cáng
  1. 1 sow in spring, develop in summer, harvest in autumn, store in winter (idiom)

Sample Sentences

一个人到了这种境界,他能动也能静,能屈也能伸,能微笑也能痛哭,能像廿世纪人一样的复杂,也能像亚当夏娃一样的纯真,一句话,他心里已有猛虎在细嗅蔷薇。
yī gè rén dào le zhèzhǒng jìngjiè ,tā néng dòng yě néng jìng ,néng qū yě néng shēn ,néng wēixiào yě néng tòngkū ,néng xiàng niàn shìjì rén yīyàng de fùzá ,yě néng xiàng Yàdāng Xiàwá yīyàng de chúnzhēn ,yījùhuà ,tā xīnli yǐ yǒu měng hǔ zài xì xiù qiángwēi 。
A person, once they reach this state of being, can be active and passive, they can yield and extend, they can smile and can feel pain, they can be as complex as a twentieth century man and as pure as Adam and Eve, in one sentence, in them, the tiger sniffs the rose.