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Hanyu Pinyin Bopomofo Tong-yong Wade– Giles MPS II Yale EFEO Lessing –Othmer Gwoyeu Romatzyh IPA Note Tone 1 Tone 2 Tone 3 Tone 4 a: ㄚ: a: a: a: a: a: a: a: ar: aa: ah: a: ai
Lao-tzu's treatise on the response of the Tao : Tʻai-shang kan-ying pʻien / Li Ying-chang ; translated with an introduction by Eva Wong ; with an historical introduction by Sean Dennison. San Francisco, CA : Harper San Francisco, c1994. ISBN 0060649569 (alk. paper) : The Shambhala guide to Taoism 1st ed. / Eva Wong. Boston : Shambhala, c1997.
Hung Shing wong (Chinese: 洪聖), also known as Hung Shing Ye (洪聖爺) and Tai Wong (大王) is a Chinese folk religion deity. The most popular tale states that in his lifetime he was a government official in the Tang dynasty (AD 618–907) [ 1 ] [ 2 ] named Hung Hei ( 洪熙 ) serving Pun Yue in present-day Guangdong , China .
Currently, government departments, particularly the Survey and Mapping Office of the Lands Department, consult the Chinese Language Department [clarification needed] of the Civil Service Bureau before gazetting names and the latter vet proposed names using the Three Way Chinese Commercial/Telegraphic Code Book, originally published by the Royal Hong Kong Police Force Special Branch for ...
Alternatively, historian Pamela Crossley argues that "Hung Taiji" was a title "of Mongolian inspiration" derived from hung, a word that appeared in other Mongolian titles at the time. [3] Early seventeenth-century Chinese and Korean sources rendered his name as "Hong Taiji" (洪台極). [4]
Bobby Au-Yeung as So Tung Po, a famous poet and officer in Song dynasty; Joey Meng as Wong Yun Zhi, Tung po's younger cousin-sister-in-law and wife later. Jimmy Au as So Chit, Tung Po's younger brother, also a poet and officer. Harriet Yeung as So Tai Mui, one of the two Tung Po's younger sisters, So Siu Mui's elder sister. Chan Kwai Sheung's ...
The eponymous title Baopuzi derives from Ge Hong's hao (號), the hao being a type of sobriquet or pseudonym. Baopuzi literally means "The Master Who Embraces Simplicity;" [1] compounded from the words bao meaning "embrace; hug; carry; hold in both arms; cherish"; pu meaning "uncarved wood", also being a Taoist metaphor for a "person's original nature; simple; plain"; and, zi meaning "child ...
It is nearly identical to Pe̍h-ōe-jī, apart from: using ts tsh instead of ch chh, using u instead of o in vowel combinations such as oa and oe, using i instead of e in eng and ek, using oo instead of o͘, and using nn instead of ⁿ.