0 the part of the body between the neck and waist, containing the heart and the lungs -- dada
1 a large, strong wooden or metal box -- peti kayu
The sheets were kept in a wooden chest.
The keys to company chests were also kept by the ruling clique.
The keys of other chests were put in the safe-keeping of parish notables.
Attention is given thus to the regulation of meetings, chests and keys, and the selective discharge of information.
Their shoulders are round and very falling, their chests and hips narrow, their hands and feet very small, their stature from four feet eight inches to five feet one inch.
Although government complaints about the failure of chests to use their income philanthropically may have been accurate in the 1560s, the crisis of the 1570s instigated higher levels of expenditure.
The lure of possible housing profit brought funds out from chests or under mattresses, mobilizing the small funds of widows and the elderly besides those of larger lenders and syndicators.
The rate of import is now 20 chests per month, and it is not at present proposed to vary this amount.
Think of those androgynous beauties, think of the hairy chests, think of the well-muscled, increasingly ostentatious monsters.
中文繁体
身體部位, 胸膛,胸部, 胸腔…
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身体部位, 胸膛,胸部, 胸腔…
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pecho, baúl, pecho [masculine]…
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peito, baú, cofre…
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胸(部), (ものを入れる)大きい木の箱…
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göğüs kafesi, sandık, kutu…
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poitrine [feminine], torse [masculine], caisse [feminine]…
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pit, bagul…
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