释义 |
song noun—歌 n (often used) 曲 n 歌曲 n Examples:storytelling dramatic art dating back Song and Yuan periods, single narrator without music, often historical topics with commentary—Kaifeng prefecture level city in Henan, old capital of Northern Song, former provincial capital of Henan—Zhou Dun'yi (1017-1073), Song dynasty neo-Confucian scholar—thirty six initial consonants of Song phonetic theory—Wu Zimu (lived c. 1270), writer at the end of the Song dynasty—Song Jiaoren (1882-1913), politician of the revolutionary party involved in the 1911 Xinhai revolution, murdered in Shanghai in 1913—Li Fang (925-996), scholar between Tang and Song dynasties, author of fictional history—Kaifeng as the capital of Northern Song dynasty—Wen Tianxiang (1236-1283), Song dynasty politician and poet, folk hero in resisting Mongol invasion in Jiangxi in 1275—Bayan of the Baarin (1236-1295), Mongol Yuan general under Khubilai Khan, victorious over the Southern Song 1235-1239—Yang Ningshi (873-954) calligrapher of 5 dynasties period between Tang and Song—Cheng Hao (1032-1085), Song neo-Confucian scholar—Song and Yuan literary form based on vernacular folk stories—Soong Mei-ling or Song Meiling (1898-2003), Chiang Kai-shek's wife (subsequently widow)—old tea-horse market between Tibet, China, Southeast Asia and India, formalized as a state enterprise under the Song dynasty—Su Yijian (958-997), Northern Song writer and poet—Su Zhe (1039-1112), northern Song writer and calligrapher—folk song from Wu or from south China more generally—failed reform of Northern Song government in 1043—Bao Zheng (999-1062), Northern Song official renowned for his honesty—Wang Qinruo (962-1025), Northern Song dynasty official—landmark used during the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD)—Wang Zhu (-c. 990), Song calligrapher and writer—Su Xun (1009-1066), northern Song writer of prose—Kou Zhun (961-1023), Northern Song politician and poet— |