First, peel bāo
1, peeling [bāo pí] To peel off the outer layer of something.
2, stripping [bāo piāo] and looting.
3, the group stripped [tuán bāo] of criticism and criticism.
4, peeling [diāo bāo] damage.
5. Pull and peel [xián bāo].
6, chu peel [chǔ bāo] refers to blow, damage.
7, humiliation [bā o r incarnation] refers to the humiliation of dismissal.
8, stripped sitting [bāo zuò] dismissed. "Biography of An Lushan in Old Tang Dynasty": "Being long and understanding six strange languages is a mutual market. For twenty years, Zhang Shouxuan spent the festival in Youzhou, and Lushan was aware of stealing sheep. He stood guard and stripped himself, trying to kill him with a stick. "
Second, peel B not
1, exploitation [bō xuē] originally refers to plunder, but now it refers to the use of [a person's] labor without giving fair or considerable remuneration.
2, denudation [b not shy] peeling and gradually damaged due to the use of fake and inferior coatings, the wall skin was denuded in half a year.
3. Deprive [bō duó] of exploitation and plunder.
4. Stripping [bō lí] Attachment or covering falls off.
5. Peeling [bō zhuó] is also called "peeling". Onomatopoeia Knocking at the door or playing chess.
6. The covering on the surface of the object falls off in pieces.
7. exploitation [pán bō] refers to borrowing money at high interest and calculating exploitation.
8. Stripping Pass [bō i] Stripping Pass has been brilliant at the junction of Yunnan and Guangxi for hundreds of thousands of years, and is known as the "Yunnan-Guangdong-Tianjin Pass".