jūn
monarch
lord
gentleman
ruler
jūn chén
a ruler and his ministers (old)
Jūn shān
Junshan district of Yueyang city 岳陽|岳阳[Yue4 yang2], Hunan
jūn zǐ
nobleman
person of noble character
Dèng Lì jūn
Teresa Teng (1953-1995), Taiwanese pop idol
yǐn jūn zǐ
opium eater
drug addict
chain smoker
Jūn yuè
Grand Hyatt (hotel brand)
láng jūn
my husband and master (archaic)
playboy of rich family
pimp
Lǎo jūn
Laozi or Lao-tze (c. 500 BC), Chinese philosopher, the founder of Taoism
the sacred book of Daoism, 道德經|道德经 by Laozi
jūn zǐ lán
scarlet kafir lily
Clivia miniata (botany)
zhū jūn
Gentlemen! (start of a speech)
Ladies and Gentlemen!
Wáng Zhāo jūn
Wang Zhaojun (52-19 BC), famous beauty at the court of Han emperor Yuan 漢元帝|汉元帝[Han4 Yuan2 di4], one of the Four legendary beauties 四大美女[si4 da4 mei3 nu:3]
zhèng rén jūn zi
upright gentleman
man of honor
jūn zi zhī jiāo
Friendship between gentlemen, insipid as water (idiom, from Zhuangzi 莊子|庄子[Zhuāng zǐ]).
rú yì láng jūn
ideal husband
"Mr. Right"
Yí jūn
Yijun County in Tongchuan 銅川|铜川[Tong2 chuan1], Shaanxi
jūn zi zhī jiāo dàn rú shuǐ
A gentleman's friendship, insipid as water (idiom, from Zhuangzi 莊子|庄子[Zhuāng zǐ]).
Dōng jūn
Lord of the East, the sun God of Chinese mythology
Jūn shì tǎn dīng bǎo
Constantinople, capital of Byzantium
shì jūn
regicide
to commit regicide
chǔ jūn
heir apparent to a throne
lóng jūn
the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea (mythology)
Tán jūn
Tangun, legendary founder of Korea in 2333 BC
Jūn shān qū
Junshan district of Yueyang city 岳陽|岳阳[Yue4 yang2], Hunan
Mèng cháng jūn
Lord Menchang of Qi, Chancellor of Qi and of Wei during the Warring States Period (475-221 BC)
xiān jūn
my late father
my ancestors
the late emperor
Zào jūn
Zaoshen, the god of the kitchen
also written 灶神
Yí jūn xiàn
Yijun county in Tóngchuān 銅川|铜川[Tóng chuān], Shǎnxī
liáng shàng jūn zǐ
lit. the gentleman on the roof beam
fig. a thief
jūn zǐ dòng kǒu bù dòng shǒu
a gentleman uses his mouth and not his fist
Lǔ jūn
the lord of Lu (who declined to employ Confucius)
yǐn jūn zi
recluse
hermit
used for homophone 癮君子|瘾君子, opium addict
wù xū liù jūn zǐ
the six gentlemen martyrs of the failed reform movement of 1898, executed in its aftermath, namely: Tan Sitong 譚嗣同|谭嗣同, Lin Xu 林旭, Yang Shenxiu 楊深秀|杨深秀, Liu Guangdi 劉光第|刘光第, Kang Guangren 康廣仁|康广仁 and Yang Rui 楊銳|杨锐
rén rén jūn zǐ
people of good will (idiom); charitable person