- 鞠躬 jūgōng to bowTo bend the body as a gesture of respect or greeting; can also mean to bend down in a literary context.
- 鞠躬尽瘁 jūgōngjìncuì to spare no effortto work with total dedication and strive to the utmost, literally "to bend to the task until one is worn out"; often used in the phrase [[鞠躬尽瘁,死而后已|鞠躬盡瘁,死而後已|ju1 gong1 jin4 cui4 si3 er2 hou4 yi3]]
- 讯鞠 xùnjū to hold a trial(variant form) to conduct a trial or interrogate a suspect
- 踢鞠 tījū cujuto play an ancient Chinese ball game involving kicking a leather ball into a net, regarded as a precursor to modern soccer
- 蹋鞠 tàjū cujuAn ancient Chinese game of kicking a ball made of leather, considered the early ancestor of modern soccer; also written as [[蹴鞠|蹴鞠|cu4 ju1]], [[踢鞠|踢鞠|ti1 ju1]], or [[阘鞠|闒鞠|ta4 ju1]]
- 蹴鞠 cùjū cujuAn ancient Chinese ball-kicking game similar to modern soccer, popular from the Han through Song dynasties.
- 阘鞠 tàjū cuju(variant form) ancient Chinese ball game and an early ancestor of modern soccer
- 鞠养 jūyǎng to rearto rear or nurture children
- 鞠子 júzǐ young child(literary) young boy; little child
- 鞠育 jūyù to raise childrento bring up or rear children; to nurture and provide for
- 鞠躬尽力 jūgōngjìnlì to spare no effortto bend to a task and strive to the utmost; to work with total devotion
- 鞠躬尽力,死而后已 jūgōngjìnlìsǐ'érhòuyǐ to give one's all until deathto devote oneself entirely to a cause with the utmost effort until the very end of one's life
- 鞠躬尽瘁,死而后已 jūgōngjìncuìsǐ'érhòuyǐ to give one's all until death(idiom) to work with total devotion and spare no effort until one's dying day; to spare no effort in the service of one's country or a cause until the day one dies; literally to bend to the task until worn out and only stop at death
- 鞠部 júbù theater world(variant form) the theatrical world or show business
Sources
- Frequency data
- MTSU Chinese text computingSUBTLEX-CH