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Cheng Chui Ping (traditional Chinese: 鄭翠萍; simplified Chinese: 郑翠萍; January 9, 1949 – April 24, 2014), also known as Sister Ping (Chinese: 萍姐), was a Chinese woman who ran a human smuggling operation bringing people from China into the United States between 1984 and 2000.
Ching Shih (1775–1844), a female Chinese pirate and the widow of Zheng Yi, known for fighting the Qing, British, and Portuguese navies with 300+ junks and 20,000 - 40,000 Chinese pirates; Zheng Yifeng (born 1851), businessman and philanthropist based in Bangkok, known as Yi Kor Hong or Er Ger Feng. Cheng Wen-tsan (born 1967), Mayor of Taoyuan ...
Chen Yi 2004 Right Shakehand 59 Zhang Rui 23 January 1997 (age 28) Hubei: Right Shakehand 73 Fan Siqi 28 February 1998 (age 26) Shandong: Right Shakehand 77 Liu Weishan 4 October 1999 (age 25) Tianjin: Right Shakehand 81 Wang Xiaoting 2000 Right Shakehand 93 Wu Yangchen 2002 Right Penhold 96 Yang Yiyun 2003 Right
Cheng I-ching (Chinese: 鄭怡靜; pinyin: Zhèng Yíjìng; born 15 February 1992) is a Taiwanese table tennis player. She competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the women's singles event, in which she was eliminated in the quarterfinals by Li Xiaoxia, and as part of the Chinese Taipei team in the women's team event.
She was subsequently given to Gao Huan's son Gao Cheng as his wife, although the date of the marriage is not known. Princess Pingyi was said to be both beautiful and virtuous. In 541, she bore Gao Cheng a son, Gao Xiaowan (高孝琬). Emperor Xiaojing personally visited Gao Cheng and her to congratulate them. Later, she also bore him two daughters.
This list includes Hong Kong players from mainland China but not foreign-born players of Chinese descent (e.g. the entire 2012 U.S. team: Timothy Wang, Ariel Hsing, Erica Wu and Lily Zhang), with the exception of Hui So Hung who was born in Indonesia but was already a Chinese citizen when she emigrated to British Hong Kong in 1978.
Yi defended his claim and said that the incident in 195 is valid because of the circumstances under which it was used, which were very similar to the incidents involving Zhao Yun and Wen Ping (see the sections below). Cao Cao was trying to confuse Lü Bu by making use of the geographical features (the "deep forest") and by ordering women to ...
Cheng Jianping (Chinese: 程建萍; pinyin: Chéng Jiànpíng) also known as Wang Yi (Chinese: 王译) is a Chinese political dissident and human rights activist who was sentenced in November 2010, when she was 46 years old, [1] to a year of re-education through labor after she posted comments to her Twitter account saying, "Charge, angry youth!"