duō ge
many
multiple
multi- (faceted, ethnic etc)
nà ge
that one
also pr. [nei4 ge5]
dān ge
single
alone
individually
an odd one
dān ge
to tarry
to delay
to stop over
yāng ge
Yangge, a popular rural folk dance
gē ge
older brother
CL:個|个[ge4],位[wei4]
jǐ ge yuè
several months
the last few months
shàng ge
first (of two parts)
last (week etc)
previous
the above
yī ge jiē yī ge
one by one
one after another
yī ge yàng
same as 一樣|一样[yi1 yang4]
the same
Dé gé
Dêgê county (Tibetan: sde dge 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)
rèn yī ge
any one of (a list of possibilities)
sān ge nǚ rén yī tái xì
three women are enough for a drama (idiom)
yī tiān yī ge yàng
to change from day to day
Fēi chū ge Wèi lái
Futurama (US TV animated series, 1999-)
yāng ge jù
Yangge opera, a rural form of theater
bàn ge rén
(not) a single person
(no) one
Sān ge Shì jiè
the Three Worlds (as proposed by Mao Zedong), i.e. the superpowers (USA and USSR), other wealthy countries (UK, France, Japan etc), and the developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America
sān ge nǚ rén yī tái xì
three women are enough for a drama (idiom)
yī ge tiān nán , yī ge dì běi
to live miles apart (idiom)
yī ge bā zhǎng pāi bù xiǎng
lit. one palm alone cannot clap (proverb)
fig. it takes two persons to start a dispute
it takes two to tango
it's difficult to achieve anything without support
yī ge tóu liǎng ge dà
(coll.) to feel as though one's head could explode (Tw)
ge tóu
(coll.) (suffix) my ass!
yeah, right!
yī kǒu chī ge pàng zi
lit. to want to get fat with only one mouthful (proverb)
fig. to try to achieve one's goal in the shortest time possible
to be impatient for success
mā le ge bā zi
fuck!
motherfucker!
fucking
mā lā ge bā zi
fuck!
motherfucker!
fucking
nǐ ge tóu
(coll.) (suffix) my ass!
yeah, right!
dān ge
variant of 耽擱|耽搁[dan1 ge5]
Sì ge Quán miàn
Four Comprehensives (political guidelines announced by President Xi Jinping, 2015)
sì ge xiàn dài huà
Deng Xiaoping's four modernizations practiced from the 1980s (possibly planned together with Zhou Enlai), namely: modernization of industry, agriculture, national defense and science and technology
abbr. to 四化
dì èr ge rén
the second person
(fig.) someone else
third party
gé ge
princess (loanword from Manchu, used in the Qing Dynasty)