jiàn xiē
to stop in the middle of sth
intermittent
intermittence
xiē xi
to have a rest
to stay for the night
to go to bed
to sleep
xiē hòu yǔ
saying in which the second part, uttered after a pause or totally left out, is the intended meaning of the allegory presented in the first part
xiē
to rest
to take a break
to stop
to halt
(dialect) to sleep
a moment
a short while
xiē sī dǐ lǐ
hysteria (loanword)
hysterical
xiē jiǎo
to stop on the way for a rest
Mǐ xiē ěr
Michel or Mitchell (name)
George Mitchell (1933-), US Democratic party politician and diplomat, influential in brokering Northern Ireland peace deal in 1990s, US Middle East special envoy from 2009
xiē yè
to close down (temporarily or permanently)
to go out of business
Mǎ xiē ěr
Marshall (name)
George Catlett Marshall (1880-1959), US general in WWII and Secretary of State 1947-1949, author of the postwar Marshall plan for Europe and Nobel peace laureate
xiē cài
Stop it! (Beijing and Internet slang)
Game over!
You're dead!
ān xiē
to go to bed
to retire for the night
Mì xiē gēn hú
Lake Michigan, one of the Great Lakes 五大湖 [Wǔ dà hú]
guān diàn xiē yè
to close up shop and cease business temporarily
closed for business
Mì xiē gēn Hú
Lake Michigan, one of the Great Lakes 五大湖[Wu3 da4 hu2]
xiē le ba
(dialect) give me a break!
forget about it!
xiē sù
to lodge
to stay (for the night)
xiē xīn
to drop the matter
to stop worrying
xiē dǐng
to be balding
to be thinning on top