Instantly, Chow is something of a national hero. 顷刻之间,周几乎成了国家英雄。
We had some good chow in that little restaurant. 我们在那家小餐厅吃了一些不错的食物。
Fay: Yes, she's a chowchow and only six months old. 费伊:不错,是新养的,是只中国狗,只有六个月大。
chow
[ noun ]
the imperial dynasty of China from 1122 to 221 BC; notable for the rise of Confucianism and Taoism
<noun.group>
informal terms for a meal
<noun.food>
breed of medium-sized dogs with a thick coat and fluffy curled tails and distinctive blue-black tongues; believed to have originated in northern China
<noun.animal>
Chow \Chow\, n. [Chin. chou.] 1. A prefecture or district of the second rank in China, or the chief city of such a district; -- often part of the name of a city, as in Foochow. [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
2. a breed of thick-coated medium-sized dogs with fluffy curled tails and distinctive blue-black tongues; -- same as {chowchow[3]}, n.. [PJC]
He feeds it guinea pig chow.
So "we're certainly not suggesting that people go out and chow down on cheese and hamburgers," Pariza said Tuesday during the American Cancer Society's science writers' seminar.
First in the chow line was Isiah Thomas, the veteran Detroit guard.
Unlike the pork chow mein, that news was hard for me to swallow.
On any evening, this tiny Mohawk Valley village of 777 people welcomes the 18-wheelers spilling in to fill up on diesel fuel or get fine-tuned as their drivers shower, chow down or bunk for the night.
An elderly woman has a "nervous chow," says one.
First lady Barbara Bush wore desert camouflage gear and waited in a military chow line with the president for helpings of turkey.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, "The chow stinks." His unsparing criticism of tactics and doctrine continued throughout his 25-year career.
Bush and his wife, Barbara, clad in camouflage gear, waited in a chow line with troops deployed at a desolate desert outpost 65 miles from the Kuwait border.
He told a waiter he came "to see the chow." The president didn't sit down for lunch, but he shook hands, waved and joked with the crowd.