释义 |
Examples:late Warring States period, c. 250-221 BC before the First Emperor's Qin Dynasty—Qin Mu (1919-1992), educator and prolific writer—lit. qin and se sing in harmony—qin and se, two string instruments that play in perfect harmony—the end of the Qin dynasty 207 BC—Western Qin of the Sixteen Kingdoms (385-431)—generic name for northern ethnic minorities during the Qin and Han Dynasties (221 BC-220 AD)—seal script as unified by the Qin dynasty—Hangu Pass in modern day Henan Province, strategic pass forming the eastern gate of the Qin State during the Warring States Period (770-221 BC)—Former Qin of the Sixteen Kingdoms (351-395)—the small or lesser seal, the form of Chinese character standardized by the Qin dynasty—Later Qin of the Sixteen Kingdoms (384-417)—Zhou Bo (?-169 BC), military man and politician at the Qin-Han transition, a founding minister of Western Han—ancient (esp. pre-Qin) pronunciation of a Chinese character—Li Si (c. 280-208 BC), Legalist philosopher, calligrapher and Prime minister of Qin kingdom and Qin dynasty from 246 208 BC—Qin Dynasty (221-207 BC)—Qin Ershi (229-207 BC), second Qin emperor—the Qin burning of the books in 212 BC—pre-Qin, Chinese history up the foundation of the Qin imperial dynasty in 221 BC—used broadly for many pre-Qin scripts—serve Qin in the morning Chu in the evening (idiom); quick switch sides—the Qin (221-207 BC) and Han (206 BC-220 AD) dynasties—Qin Shihuang (259-210 BC), the first emperor—the late Qin and early Republic, i.e. China around 1911—Lao Ai (-238 BC), man of Qin famous for his giant penis—the Qin army (model for the terracotta warriors)—originally two provinces of Qin and Han—Qin State, one of the seven states of the Warring States Period (475-220 BC)— |