所有 | suǒ yǒu | all / to have; to possess; to own |
具有 | jù yǒu | to have; to possess |
具备 | jù bèi | to possess / to have / equipped with / able to fulfill (conditions or requirements) |
占有 | zhàn yǒu | to have / to own / to hold / to occupy / to possess / to account for (a high proportion etc) |
有着 | yǒu zhe | to have / to possess |
拥有 | yōng yǒu | to have; to possess |
称 | chèn | to fit; to match; to suit / (coll.) to have; to possess / Taiwan pr. [cheng4] |
具 | jù | tool / device / utensil / equipment / instrument / talent / ability / to possess / to have / to provide / to furnish / to state / classifier for devices, coffins, dead bodies |
求生 | qiú shēng | to seek survival / to possess the will to live |
三头六臂 | sān tóu liù bì | lit. to have three heads and six arms (idiom) / fig. to possess remarkable abilities / a being of formidable powers |
德才兼备 | dé cái - jiān bèi | (idiom) possessing both integrity and talent |
拥 | yōng | to hold in one's arms; to embrace / to surround; to gather around / to throng; to swarm / (bound form) to support (as in 擁護|拥护[yong1 hu4]) / (literary) to have; to possess / Taiwan pr. [yong3] |
别无长物 | bié wú cháng wù | to possess nothing except bare necessities / to live a poor or frugal life |
神通广大 | shén tōng guǎng dà | (idiom) to possess great magical power; to possess remarkable abilities |
领有 | lǐng yǒu | to possess / to own |
据有 | jù yǒu | to occupy / to hold / to possess |
侃侃 | kǎn kǎn | to possess assurance and composure |
身无长物 | shēn wú cháng wù | to possess nothing except bare necessities / to live a poor or frugal life |
附体 | fù tǐ | (of a spirit or deity) to possess sb |
附身 | fù shēn | to enter a body / to possess |
在身 | zài shēn | to possess / to be occupied or burdened with (work, a contract, a lawsuit) |
徒拥虚名 | tú yōng xū míng | to possess an undeserved reputation (idiom) |
德艺双馨 | dé yì - shuāng xīn | (idiom) possessing both integrity and artistic skills |
稚气未脱 | zhì qì wèi tuō | still possessing the innocence of childhood (idiom) |
道高益安,势高益危 | dào gāo yì ān , shì gāo yì wēi | More moral strength increases one's safety, more power and influence increases one's danger (idiom, from Records of the Historian 史記|史记). cf Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it (William Pitt the Elder, 1770). |