zhòngyīngguànyònglìgōu:
  • zài cháng de nán zhōng xīn qíng zhí dōuhěn píng jìng .
    She maintained her equanimity throughout her long ordeal.
  • tòu píng xiè běn fāng chéng
    basic equation for turbomachinery
  • shǐfāng chéng shìpíng héng
    To bring(an equation) into balance.
  • mǒu tiān chì dào píng xíng gāi chì dào de tiān zhōu wéi de tiáo gòu xiàn zhī jiān de jiǎo
    the angular distance between an imaginary line around a heavenly body parallel to its equator and the equator itself.
  • wéi rào qiú chì dào píng xíng de jiǎ xiǎng xiàn
    an imaginary line around the Earth parallel to the equator.
  • wéi rào yuè liàng yuè liàng de chì dào píng xíng de jiǎ xiǎng xiàn
    an imaginary line around the moon parallel to its equator.
  • chì dào nán de hǎi yóu zhǐ nán tài píng yáng
    any sea south of the equator (but especially the South Pacific).
  • chì dào lián jié qiú biǎo miàn shàng suǒ yòu zhēn chéng shuǐ píng fāng xiàng píng héng bìng méi yòu qīng jiǎo de diǎn de xiàn
    an imaginary line paralleling the equator where a magnetic needle has no dip.
  • tài píng yáng zhōng gāng hǎo zài chì dào nán de dǎo guóshì gòng guó
    an island republic in the west central Pacific just S of the equator.
  • chì dào fēng dài kào jìn chì dào de hǎi zhēng shì huò fēng píng làng jìnghuò wēi fēng huò fēng
    A region of the ocean near the equator, characterized by calms, light winds, or squalls.
  • bàn tiān qiú bèi huáng dàotiān chì dào huò píng juàn fēn chéng liǎng bàn de tiān qiú de bàn
    Either half of the celestial sphere as divided by the ecliptic, the celestial equator, or the horizon.
  • wěi xiànwěi juàn chì dào píng miàn píng xíng qiě huán rào qiú yòng lái biǎo míng wěi gāo de duō jiǎ xiǎng xiàn zhōng de rèn tiáo
    Any of the imaginary lines representing degrees of latitude that encircle the earth parallel to the plane of the equator.
  • duì liú céng dǐng wèi duì liú céng píng liú céng zhī jiān de jiè xiàn gāo cóng liǎng de yuē 8 gōng ( 5 yīng zhì chì dào shàng yuē 18 gōng ( 11 yīng
    The boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere varying in altitude from approximately8 kilometers(5 miles) at the poles to approximately18 kilometers(11 miles) at the equator.
  • zhí jiàn píng jiàn
    axial and equatorial bonds
  • dōng zhí jìng nán běi zhí jìng dezài liǎng wèi shì píng de
    having the equatorial diameter greater than the polar diameter; being flattened at the poles.
  • běn nián de liàng chì dào tài píng yáng de qiáng 'è 'ěr nuò xiàn xiàng tóng shí chū xiàn
    The extreme rainfall coincided with an exceptionally strong E1 Nino event in the equatorial Pacific.
  • qiú zài liǎng biǎn píng diǎnsuǒ zhí jìng lüè xiǎo chì dào zhí jìng
    The earth is slightly flat at the poles, so that the polar diameter is slightly less than the equatorial diameter.
  • ǎi rényóu zhǐ rén zhǒng píng jūn shēn gāo 5 yīng chǐ( 127 de rén zhǒng zhōng de yuányóu shì zhǐ chì dào fēi zhōu zhōu dōng nán de 'ǎi rén
    A member of any of various peoples, especially of equatorial Africa and parts of southeast Asia, having an average height less than5 feet(127 centimeters).
  • zài shù sài zhōngnán píng děng de shēn fèn xiāng jìng
    In equestrian, male and female compete against each other on an equal basis.
  • xiāng děng de shǔ yòu guān huò zhǐ chū xiàn zhī jiān huò píng miàn zhī jiān chù chù děng de
    Of, relating to, or designating curves or surfaces everywhere equidistant.
  • yuányuán xíng cóng dìng diǎnyuán xīnděng dào rèn diǎn de píng miàn xiàn
    A plane curve everywhere equidistant from a given fixed point, the center.
  • pāo xiàn dào dìng zhí xiàn zài zhí xiàn shàng mǒu dìng diǎn děng de diǎn de guǐ suǒ xíng chéng de píng miàn xiàn
    A plane curve formed by the locus of points equidistant from a fixed line and a fixed point not on the line.
  • biān xiāng děng de píng xíng biān xíng shì zhí jiǎo de děng biān píng xíng biān xíng
    a parallelogram with four equal sides; an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram.
  • píng héng cháo xué shuō
    equilibrium theory of tide
  • jìng píng héng yuán
    principle of statical equilibrium
  • shī liǎo píng héng
    He loses his equilibrium.
  • jīng zhǎn shēng tài píng héng
    economic development and ecological equilibrium
  • shēng xué fāng miàn de chéng niú dǎo jiào bǐng 'ān suān zhuǎn táng suān de rén gōng chéngnóng xué fāng miàn de jiāo shuǐ dàogāo néng fāng miàn de zhèng diàn duì zhuàng yuán dànqīng dàn měi miǎo 1 yùn suàn de xíng suàn děng de yán zhì cháng zhēng 3 hào yùn zài huǒ jiàn de shèwèi xīng tōng xùn chāo dǎo yán jiū děngzhè xiē fāng miàn dōuyǐ yuè huò jiē jìn guó xiān jìn shuǐ píng
    In biological science, Chinese scientists succeeded in making synthetic bovine insulin and in converting yeast alanine into synthetic ribonucleic acid (RNA); in agricultural science, experiments in hybrid paddy rice have been successful; in high-energy physics, an electron-positron collider was constructed; other achievements in high technology are represented by the successful explosion of atomic and hydrogen bombs, the making of super-computers capable of 100 million calculations per second, the launching of the Long March III carrier rocket and the research in satellite telecommunications and superconductivity. In all these fields, China has either reached or approached advanced world levels.
  • suān jiǎn píng héng zhàng 'ài
    disturbance of acid-base equilibrium
  • shēn de píng héng zhuàng tài
    A state of bodily equilibrium.
  • chù zài huò zhě shǐ chù zài píng héng de zhuàng tài
    being or thrown out of equilibrium.
  • héng xīng qiú de píng héng wěn dìng
    equilibrium and stability of stellar sphere