jiā
home
family
(polite) my (sister, uncle etc)
classifier for families or businesses
refers to the philosophical schools of pre-Han China
noun suffix for a specialist in some activity, such as a musician or revolutionary, corresponding to English -ist, -er, -ary or -ian
CL:個|个[ge4]
dà jiā
everyone
influential family
great expert
zhuān jiā
expert
specialist
CL:個|个[ge4]
jiā tíng
family
household
CL:戶|户[hu4],個|个[ge4]
guó jiā
country
nation
state
CL:個|个[ge4]
yī jiā
the whole family
the same family
the family ... (when preceded by a family name)
group
jiā jū
home
residence
to stay at home (unemployed)
zuò jiā
author
CL:個|个[ge4],位[wei4]
shāng jiā
merchant
business
enterprise
jiā diàn
household electric appliance
abbr. for 家用電器|家用电器
jiā chù
domestic animal
livestock
cattle
jū jiā
to live at home
to stay at home
home (schooling etc)
in-home (care etc)
household (repairs etc)
living (environment etc)
jiā jù
furniture
CL:件[jian4],套[tao4]
rén jiā
household
dwelling
family
sb else's house
household business
house of woman's husband-to-be
CL:戶|户[hu4],家[jia1]
rén jia
other people
sb else
he, she or they
I, me (referring to oneself as "one" or "people")
mín jiā
minka
commoner's house
Bai ethnic group
Shí jiā zhuāng
Shijiazhuang prefecture level city and capital of Hebei Province 河北省[He2 bei3 Sheng3] in north China
jiā yòng
home-use
domestic
family expenses
housekeeping money
jiā yù hù xiǎo
understood by everyone (idiom); well known
a household name
Bīng Jiā
Military School of Thought, one of the Hundred Schools of Thought 諸子百家|诸子百家[Zhū zǐ Bǎi Jiā] of the Warring States Period (475-220BC)
bīng jiā
military strategist in ancient China
military commander
soldier
guān chá jiā
observer
The Observer (UK newspaper)
fā jiā
to lay down a family fortune
to get rich
to become prosperous
bǎi jiā
many schools of thought
many people or households
gōng jiā
the public
the state
society
the public purse
jiā shì
family matters
domestic affairs
housework
wán jiā
player (of a game)
enthusiast (audio, model planes etc)
jiā zhǎng
head of a household
family head
patriarch
parent or guardian of a child
Dào Jiā
Daoist School of Thought of the Warring States Period (475-221 BC), based on the religion of Laozi or Lao-tze 老子[Lǎo zǐ] (c. 500 BC-) and later promulgated by Zhuangzi 庄子 (369-286 BC)
jiā jìng
family financial situation
family circumstances
chí jiā
to housekeep
housekeeping
yǎng jiā
to support a family
to raise a family