English | German | Russian | Czech

liu English

Examples liu examples

How do I use liu in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Liu Bei and Zhuge Liang are an unbeatable team.
Liu Xiaobo is Chinese.

Movie subtitles

When the other father left, there were many Christian families. who traveled to the Christian village of Liu.
Master Wang, this landscape painting is by Liu Wenchuan of Song Dynasty.
It's rare you can collect the works of Liu Wenchuan.
Monkey Liu, is there anything else you'd like to show me?
Uncle Liu!
Liu Xiang!
Liu Xiang?
Liu Yu-de Doesn't your pa run a seafood shop?
Liu Yu-de?
Liu Yu-de, escape now.
Liu Yu-de, good luck!
You're Liu Yu-de, a fugitive!
The god Liu.
Liu-Chao Mu?
Liu Do, what are you doing?
What does Liu Do do?
General Wo Lien Te and his associate, Dr. Liu.
Professor Liu, any developments on the. disaster that happened some days before?
Professor Liu will explain to you.
Professor Liu, you'll be in charge of it.
He's the Department head Liu Yingde.
Tonight. first grab Liu Yingde to pay for the debt. Yes.
Liu Yingde.
Don't harm my daughter. Professor Liu, lose your temper?
No, dad Professor Liu, it's about her life.
Liu Yingde, your Inframan is really good.
Professor Liu, willing or not, with the glacier air, within 3 days, both of you will transform into icemen! Power!
Professor Liu, will the monster come back?
Madam Liu. what happened?
Dr. Liu! Dr. Liu!
Dr. Liu!
Doctor Liu!
This is Mr. Liu.
Huilan, Mr. Liu is leaving.
Mr. Liu.
Liu Kang has been given the dream. He is the Chosen One.
Yeah, right. Liu.
I saw this Liu Kang in the hall.

News and current affairs

The notion that Liu might be capable of subverting the immense power of the Communist Party of China is patently absurd.
Many non-Chinese, including me, have signed a letter of protest against the jailing of Liu Xiaobo.
Until China is released from the grip of religious politics, Liu's ideals are unlikely to take root.
Liu realized that Neusoft could link standard Intel chips and its own imaging software to a range of digital sensors.
LONDON - Liu Xiaobo, the imprisoned Chinese writer and human-rights campaigner, will receive the Nobel Peace Prize on December 10.
China's government has blocked Liu's wife, the acclaimed photographer Liu Xia, from participating by keeping her under virtual house arrest in Beijing.
That simple phrase neatly encapsulates Liu's peaceful 20-year-resistance to China's government, which began with a hunger strike in Tiananmen Square.
Despite this ongoing persecution, Liu continued to write and petition the government on behalf of the people of China.
Today, many individuals and countries are demonstrating their support for the Nobel Peace Prize Committee's decision to award the prize to Liu.
But, in addition to supporting Liu's achievements by making certain that they are represented at the ceremony in Oslo, world leaders need to come to grips with the Chinese government's reaction.
Liu's prize is a rebuke to the regime, because it rejects the dogma that nothing but the pursuit of economic interest matters.
China's rulers know that in a system in which justice is absent, Liu's efforts to speak to a higher moral calling requires only moral courage to be followed.
The regime has tried to separate politics and economics, but Liu has shown that this is impossible.
Liu became so angry about being accused of fraud and denied the car that he climbed atop a high advertising billboard and threatened to jump as a show of innocence.
In June Liu Liang finally got what he deserved - a BMW-325i sedan and a sincere apology from the lottery center.
Power corrupts everywhere, but individuals in China such as Liu have come to form a countervailing force.
Indeed, Liu is the British Council's guest of honor for the event.
Before his exile, Yu had been thrown into a dark room and tortured, because Liu Xiaobo won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010.
More than 100 writers have been thrown into prison for publishing political essays on the Internet, and their family members have been monitored, or, like Liu Xiaobo's wife, have been placed under house arrest.
This ever-growing list of forbidden words and taboo subjects, drawn up by Liu Binjie and his army of censors, starves the nation's soul and encages the minds of writers.
And the benefits of the 2009 Shanghai Expo were rapidly undermined by the jailing of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo and the television screens around the world broadcasting scenes of an empty chair at the Oslo ceremonies.
Likewise, one of the bravest, most lucid Chinese intellectuals, Liu Xiaobo, was arrested in December for signing Charter 08, and has yet to be released.
When Mao Zedong purged his most senior Party boss, Liu Shaoqi, during the Cultural Revolution, Liu's wife was paraded through the streets wearing ping-pong balls around her neck as a symbol of wicked decadence and extravagance.
But the jailing of Liu also demonstrates in the starkest terms that China's neglect of human rights is flowing to the rest of world alongside the mass of Chinese goods.
Fortunately, China's jailing of Liu Xiaobo will not, as we Chinese say, succeed in its effort to frighten the monkey by killing a chicken.
PRAGUE - On Christmas Day last year, one of China's best-known human rights activists, the writer and university professor Liu Xiaobo, was condemned to 11 years in prison.
For his bravery and clarity of thought about China's future, Liu deserves the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.
There are two reasons why we believe that Liu would be a worthy recipient of that prestigious award.
We are convinced that the concepts that Liu and his colleagues put down on paper in December 2008 are both universal and timeless.
Should the Nobel Committee choose to recognize Liu's courage and sacrifice in articulating these ideals, it would not only draw global attention to the injustice of Liu's 11-year sentence.
It would also help to amplify within China the universal and humanistic values for which Liu has spent so much of his life fighting.
The second reason why Liu deserves the Nobel Peace Prize resonates with Alfred Nobel's original intent for the award.
Liu's committed advocacy on behalf of democracy in China is, above all, intended for the benefit of the Chinese people.
It is primarily for these two reasons that we believe that Liu would be a worthy recipient of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.
In conferring on Liu one of the world's highest honors, the Committee would be signaling once again the importance of human rights and democracy on the one hand, and world peace and international solidarity on the other.
Liu's harsh prison sentence was meant as an exemplary measure, a stern warning to all other Chinese who might want to follow his path.
We are convinced that there are moments when exemplary civic engagement, such as Liu's, requires an exemplary response.
So why did a gentle former literature professor named Liu Xiaobo have to be sentenced to 11 years in prison, just because he publicly advocated freedom of expression and an end to one-party rule?