释义 |
‖ sanpaku|sanˈpaku| [Jap., lit. ‘three white’, f. san three + haku white.] Visibility of the white of the eye below the iris, as well as on either side. Also attrib. or as adj.
1963N.Y. Herald Tribune 18 Aug. 23/1 George Ohsawa, the Japanese philosopher and prophet of the Unique Principle walked through the streets of New York yesterday... There were many beautiful girls... But so many sanpaku. 1964T. Wolfe in N.Y. Herald Sunday Mag. 12 Jan. 15/2 Abdul Karim Kassem, President Ngo Dinh Diem and President Kennedy; all sanpaku and, now, all shot to death, all destroyed by the fate of the sanpaku. 1965W. Dufty tr. Sakurazawa Nyoiti's Macrobiotics (1972) 60 Any sign of sanpaku meant that a man's entire system—physical, physiological and spiritual—was out of balance. 1970W. Burroughs Jr. Speed 162 Had I had a rose, I'd have held it in my teeth all morning with sanpaku eyeballs. |