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  2. Monkey (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_(novel)

    Monkey: A Folk-Tale of China, more often known as simply Monkey, is an abridged translation published in 1942 by Arthur Waley of the sixteenth-century Chinese novel Journey to the West conventionally attributed to Wu Cheng'en of the Ming dynasty. Waley's remains one of the most-read English-language versions of the novel.

  3. List of websites blocked in mainland China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_websites_blocked...

    Chinese Firewall Test - Instantly test if a URL is blocked by the Great Firewall of China in real time. Tests for both symptoms of DNS poisoning and HTTP blocking from a number of locations within mainland China. China Firewall Test - Test if any domain is DNS poisoned in China in real-time. DNS poisoning is one way in which websites can be ...

  4. Monkeys in Chinese culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkeys_in_Chinese_culture

    Oracle script for nao 夒 "a monkey" bronze script for nao 夒 "a monkey" Seal script for nao 夒 "a monkey" Seal script for kui 夔 "a demon". Nao 夒 was the first "monkey" term recorded in the historical corpus of written Chinese, and frequently appeared in (14th–11th centuries BCE) Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions.

  5. Monkey King - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_King

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 30 January 2025. Character in Chinese mythology For other uses, see Monkey King (disambiguation). "Wukong" redirects here. For other uses, see Wukong (disambiguation). "Qi Tian Da Sheng" redirects here. For Pu Songling's story, see The Great Sage, Heaven's Equal. In this Chinese name, the family name is ...

  6. Ruyi Jingu Bang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruyi_Jingu_Bang

    A 19th-century drawing of Sun Wukong featuring his staff. Ruyi Jingu Bang (Chinese: 如意金箍棒; pinyin: Rúyì Jīngū Bàng; Wade–Giles: Ju 2-yi 4 Chin 1-ku 1-pang 4), or simply Ruyi Bang or Jingu Bang, is the poetic name of a magical staff wielded by the immortal monkey Sun Wukong in the 16th-century classic Chinese novel Journey to the West.

  7. New cloned monkey species highlights limits of cloning - AOL

    www.aol.com/chinese-scientists-create-cloned...

    Cloning a rhesus monkey. The Chinese team, based in Shanghai and Beijing, used a modified version of SCNT in their work on cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) and tweaked the technique ...

  8. Monkey (TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_(TV_series)

    Monkey (孫悟空, Son Gokū), the title character, is described in the theme song as being "born from an egg on a mountain top", a stone egg, and thus he is a stone monkey, a skilled fighter who becomes a brash king of a monkey tribe, who, the song goes on to claim, was "the punkiest monkey that ever popped". [4]

  9. Wuzhiqi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wuzhiqi

    The earliest description of Wuzhiqi can be found in the early 9th century collection of stories from the Tang dynasty, Guoshi bu (國史補) by Li Zhao, which briefly tells of a fisherman in Chuzhou (楚州) who encounters a monkey demon with a black body and a white head in the Huai River. [2]