Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
How to play gonggi. In the most common ruleset, there are five levels (단). The player who goes through every level without failing wins or gain a point. Level 1: Five stones are scattered on a flat surface and the player picks a stone to throw up in the air. While the first stone is still airborne, the player grabs another stone on surface.
Gonggi (공기) is a popular Korean children's game that is traditionally played using five or more small grape-sized pebbles or coloured plastic stones. It can be played alone or with friends. It can be played alone or with friends.
Gongshi (Scholar's rock) in Wenmiao temple, Shanghai. Gongshi (Chinese: 供石), also known as scholar's rocks or viewing stones, are naturally occurring or shaped rocks which are traditionally appreciated by Chinese scholars. [1]
The remains of a woman found dead on a reservation in southwestern South Dakota in January has been identified as Michelle Elbow Shield, a Sioux woman who went missing more than a year ago.
Korean women and girls would have traditionally played neolttwigi, a game of jumping on a seesaw (시소), and gongginori, a game played with five little gonggi (originally a little stone, but today many buy manufactured gongi in toy shops). Top (paengi (팽이) spinning is also a traditional game played by children.
The 72-year-old said it’s “not a sin” to use it and said she lost “three stone [42 pounds] in four months,” which she described as “too much.” ...
Biseokchigi (Korean: 비석치기) is a category of traditional Korean games involving the skillful throwing or kicking of rocks. [1]There are a wide variety of regional names for the game, including biseokchagi (비석차기), [1] biseokkagi (비석까기), [2] mogjakkagi (목자까기), [2] jakkagi (자까기), [2] bisasaeggi (비사색기), [2] and more.
In its non-geologic, traditional use, the term porphyry usually refers to the purple-red form of this stone, valued for its appearance, but other colours of decorative porphyry are also used such as "green", "black" and "grey". [1] [2] The term porphyry is from the Ancient Greek πορφύρα (porphyra), meaning "purple".