难民
nàn mín
Pinyin

Definition

难民
 - 
nàn mín
  1. refugee

Character Decomposition

Related Words (20)

rén mín
  1. 1 the people
  2. 2 CL:個|个[gè]
rén mín bì
  1. 1 Renminbi (RMB)
  2. 2 Chinese Yuan (CNY)
gōng mín
  1. 1 citizen
shì mín
  1. 1 city resident
mín zhǔ
  1. 1 democracy
mín zú
  1. 1 nationality
  2. 2 ethnic group
  3. 3 CL:個|个[gè]
Rén mín wǎng
  1. 1 online version of the People's Daily, 人民日報|人民日报[Rén mín Rì bào]
quán mín
  1. 1 entire population (of a country)
Zhōu Yú mín
  1. 1 Zhou Yumin or Vic Zhou (1981-), Taiwan singer and actor, member of pop group F4
Huí mín
  1. 1 Hui ethnic group (Chinese muslims)
guó mín
  1. 1 nationals
  2. 2 citizens
  3. 3 people of a nation
Guó mín dǎng
  1. 1 Guomindang or Kuomintang (KMT)
  2. 2 Nationalist Party
guó tài mín ān
  1. 1 the country prospers, the people at peace (idiom); peace and prosperity
jū mín
  1. 1 resident
  2. 2 inhabitant
píng mín
  1. 1 ordinary people
  2. 2 commoner
  3. 3 civilian
cūn mín
  1. 1 villager
Mín
  1. 1 surname Min
mín shì
  1. 1 civil case
  2. 2 agricultural affairs
  3. 3 civil
mín sú
  1. 1 popular custom
Mín guó
  1. 1 Republic of China (1912-1949)
  2. 2 used in Taiwan as the name of the calendar era (e.g. 民國六十年|民国六十年 is 1971, the 60th year after 1911)

Idioms (20)

仁民爱物
rén mín ài wù
  1. 1 love to all creatures (idiom, from Mencius); universal benevolence
便民利民
biàn mín lì mín
  1. 1 for the convenience and benefit of the people (idiom)
全民皆兵
quán mín jiē bīng
  1. 1 to bring the entire nation to arms (idiom)
削职为民
xuē zhí wéi mín
  1. 1 demotion to commoner (idiom)
升斗小民
shēng dǒu xiǎo mín
  1. 1 poor people (idiom)
  2. 2 those who live from hand to mouth
国弱民穷
guó ruò mín qióng
  1. 1 the country weakened and the people empoverished (idiom)
国泰民安
guó tài mín ān
  1. 1 the country prospers, the people at peace (idiom); peace and prosperity
官逼民反
guān bī mín fǎn
  1. 1 a government official drives the people to revolt (idiom); a minister provokes a rebellion by exploiting the people
吊民伐罪
diào mín fá zuì
  1. 1 to console the people by punishing the tyrants (idiom)
残民害物
cán mín hài wù
  1. 1 to harm people and damage property (idiom)
民不聊生
mín bù liáo shēng
  1. 1 The people have no way to make a living (idiom, from Record of the Grand Historian 史記|史记[Shǐ jì])
  2. 2 no way of getting by
民以食为天
mín yǐ shí wéi tiān
  1. 1 Food is the God of the people. (idiom); People view food as the primary need.
  2. 2 Food first, ethical niceties second
民怨沸腾
mín yuàn fèi téng
  1. 1 seething discontent (idiom); popular grievances boil over
民怨鼎沸
mín yuàn dǐng fèi
  1. 1 seething discontent (idiom); popular grievances boil over
民生凋敝
mín shēng diāo bì
  1. 1 the people's livelihood is reduced to destitution (idiom); a time of famine and impoverishment
民穷财尽
mín qióng cái jìn
  1. 1 the people are impoverished, their means exhausted (idiom); to drive the nation to bankruptcy
民脂民膏
mín zhī mín gāo
  1. 1 lit. the fat and wealth of the people (idiom); the nation's hard-won wealth (esp. as an object of unscrupulous exploitation)
  2. 2 the people's blood, sweat and tears
民变峰起
mín biàn fēng qǐ
  1. 1 seething discontent (idiom); widespread popular grievances
民贼独夫
mín zéi dú fū
  1. 1 tyrant and oppressor of the people (idiom); traitorous dictator
独夫民贼
dú fū mín zéi
  1. 1 tyrant and oppressor of the people (idiom); traitorous dictator

Sample Sentences

日本国会去年12月修订《出入境管理及难民认定法》。这部移民法律今年4月1日生效。
Rìběn guóhuì qùnián yuè xiūdìng 《chūrù jìng guǎnlǐ jí nànmín rèndìng fǎ 》。zhè bù yímín fǎlu:4 jīnnián yuè yī rì shēngxiào 。
The Japanese National Assembly amended the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act in December last year. This immigration law came into force on April 1 this year.
嗯,我去上海的时候听过。石库门出现于十九世纪中。当时大批难民因为打仗逃难到上海租界里,必须很多人挤在一所小房子里。久而久之,就形成了石库门这种两层楼的石质房屋。家门里面有一个很小的花园,叫天井。石库门中间细长的街道叫弄堂。以前,北京和上海的大多数居民都住在这些传统民居里。
ng4 ,wǒ qù Shànghǎi de shíhou tīng guo 。shíkùmén chūxiàn yú shíjiǔ shìjì zhōng 。dāngshí dàpī nànmín yīnwèi dǎzhàng táonàn dào Shànghǎi zūjiè lǐ ,bìxū hěn duō rén jǐ zài yī suǒ xiǎo fángzǐ lǐ 。jiǔ'érjiǔzhī ,jiù xíngchéng le shíkùmén zhèzhǒng liǎng céng lóu de shízhì fángwū 。jiāmén lǐmiàn yǒu yī ge hěn xiǎo de huāyuán ,jiào tiānjǐng 。shíkùmén zhōngjiān xìcháng de jiēdào jiào lòngtáng 。yǐqián ,Běijīng hé Shànghǎi de dàduōshù jūmín dōu zhùzài zhèxiē chuántǒng mínjū lǐ 。
Yes, I heard about it when I was in Shanghai. Shikumen came into existence in the mid-19th century. There was an influx of war refugees fleeing to the concessions in Shanghai. They had to cram into small houses. Over time, these evolved into a type of two-story house made from stone known as shikumen. There is a tiny garden inside the house called a tianjing. The long narrow lanes between shikumen houses are known as longtang. Most of the people in Beijing and Shanghai used to live in these traditional residences.
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