来自日语,kami,神,可能来【lái】自【zì】日本【běn】化汉语【yǔ】神,kaze,风,可能来【lái】自日本化【huà】汉语风。公元1274年【nián】,蒙【méng】古【gǔ】忽古烈汗命令大【dà】军大【dà】举进攻日【rì】本,但是在海上遇到台风,几近全【quán】军【jun1】覆没【méi】,日本人称【chēng】之为神风。后在【zài】二战末期,日军败局已定,为挽回【huí】败局,日军组织了自【zì】杀式【shì】的袭击队伍【wǔ】,即神风敢死队,向【xiàng】美国发起了大规模自杀式攻【gōng】击,因此引申词义【yì】自杀式的【de】。见百度百科。
As an aside, at war's end, the Japanese had, by actual count, a total of 16,397 aircraft still available for service, including 6,374 operational fighters and bombers, and if they had used only the fighters and bombers for kamikaze missions, they might have realized, additionally, 900 ships sunk or damaged and 22,000 sailors killed or injured. In fact, however, the Japanese had outfitted many aircraft, including trainers, as potential suicide attackers. As intelligence estimates indicated, the Japanese believed they could inflict at least 50,000 casualties to an invasion force by kamikaze attacks alone. [Richard P. Hallion, "Military Technology and the Pacific War," 1995]As an adjective by 1946.
来自柯林斯例句
来自柯林斯例句
来自《权威词典》
来自电影对白
来自互联网