qú dào
irrigation ditch
(fig.) channel
means
qú
big
stream or canal
drain
ditch
CL:條|条[tiao2]
him (dialect)
outer rim of a carriage wheel (old)
Qú xiàn
Qu county in Dazhou 達州|达州[Da2 zhou1], Sichuan
gōu qú
channel
moat
irrigation canal
Wǔ jiā qú
Wujyachü shehiri (Wujiaqu city) or Wǔjiāqú subprefecture level city in Ili Kazakh autonomous prefecture in north Xinjiang
Shí qú
Sêrxü county (Tibetan: ser shul rdzong) in Garze Tibetan autonomous prefecture 甘孜藏族自治州, Sichuan (formerly in Kham province of Tibet)
name of several historical figures
shí qú
stone channel (e.g. drain)
Líng qú
Lingqu canal in Xing'an county 興安|兴安, Guanxi, build in 214 BC to join Changjiang 長江|长江 with Pearl River 珠江
Wǔ jiā qú shì
Wujyachü shehiri (Wujiaqu city) or Wǔjiāqú subprefecture level city in Ili Kazakh autonomous prefecture in north Xinjiang
Shí qú xiàn
Sêrxü county (Tibetan: ser shul rdzong) in Garze Tibetan autonomous prefecture 甘孜藏族自治州[Gan1 zi1 Zang4 zu2 zi4 zhi4 zhou1], Sichuan (formerly in Kham province of Tibet)
Zhèng guó qú
Zhengguo canal, a 150 km long irrigation canal in Shaanxi built in 264 BC
qú kuí
rebel leader
ringleader
bandit chieftain
Shí qú gé
cabinet meeting in 51 BC that established the five classics of Confucianism 五經|五经[Wu3 jing1] as state canon
Xià Jìng qú
Xia Jingqu (1705-1787), Qing novelist, author of monumental novel 野叟曝言[Ye3 sou3 Pu4 yan2] Humble Words of a Rustic Elder
Shí qú gé yì
cabinet meeting in 51 BC that established the five classics of Confucianism 五經|五经[Wu3 jing1] as state canon
shuǐ dào qú chéng
lit. where water flows, a canal is formed (idiom)
fig. when conditions are right, success will follow naturally
hé qú
rivers and canals
waterway