释义 |
Examples:southern Chinese dialects of Fujian and east Guangdong—Song of the Southern dynasties (420-479), with capital at Nanjing—pen name of Deng Xiaoping during his 1992 southern tour—Lu You (1125-1210), widely regarded as the greatest of the Southern Song poets—Huizhou dialect of Gan, spoken in southern parts of Anhui Province—The nine provinces of Southern China around Guangzhou and the Pearl River delta—the middle and lower regions of the Yellow river, including Henan, western Shandong, southern Shanxi and Hebei—Minamata disease (mercury poisoning found in Southern Japan in 1956)—tenement house (esp. in southern China and Hong Kong)—Sun Jian (155-191), famous general at end of Han dynasty, forerunner of the southern kingdom of Wu of the Three Kingdoms—(old) contemptuous term for people from southern China (used by northern Chinese people)—Yunnan and Guizhou plateau in southwest China, covering east Yunnan, whole of Guizhou, west of Guangxi and southern margins of Sichuan, Hubei and Hunan—Bayan of the Baarin (1236-1295), Mongol Yuan general under Khubilai Khan, victorious over the Southern Song 1235-1239—Qihai dialect, a Wu dialect spoken in Tongzhou, Haimen, and Qidong districts in southern Jiangsu province, and on Chongming Island in Shanghai—a southern Chinese dialect of Fujian and east Guangdong—small barbarian kingdom in southern China during the Han dynasty—Zhou Yu or Chou Yü (175-210), famous general of the southern Wu kingdom and victor of the battle of Redcliff—Nanyuan or "Southern Park", an imperial hunting domain during the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, now the site of Nanhaizi Park in the south of Beijing—Li Houzhu (c. 937-978), the final Southern Tang ruler (ruled 961-975) and a renowned poet—Lü Meng (178-219), general of the southern state of Wu—Chow Gar - "Southern Praying Mantis" - Martial Art—Walloon, inhabitant of Southern French-speaking area of Belgium—old tea-horse road or southern Silk Road, dating back 6th century, from Tibet and Sichuan through Yunnan and Southeast Asia, reaching to Bhutan, Sikkim, India and beyond—Fan Zhen (c. 450-c. 510), philosopher from Qi and Liang of the Southern dynasties, as atheist denying Buddhist teachings on karma and rebirth—refers the Northern (960-1127) and Southern Song (1128-1279)—nine tones and six modes (tonal system of Cantonese and other southern languages)—area comprising southern Jiangsu, northern Zhejiang and Shanghai—Li Qingzhao (1084-c. 1151), southern Song female poet—name of states in Southern China at different historical periods—the Winnowing Basket in the southern sky, and the Big Dipper in the north (idiom); sth. which, despite its name, is of no practical use— |