释义 |
Examples:lit. fifth child of the Wangs—Wang Ching-wei (1883-1944), left wing Guomingdang politician, subsequently Japanese collaborator—Wang Shuwen (personal name)—Wang Daiyu (1584-1670), Hui Islamic scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—Wang Mang (45 BC-23 AD), usurped power and reigned 9-23 between the former and later Han—Wang Bo (650-676), Tang poet—Wang Su (c. 195-256), classical scholar of Cao Wei dynasty, believed have forged several classical texts—Wang Fuzhi (1619-1692), wide-ranging scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—Wang Li (1900-1986), one of the pioneers of modern Chinese linguistics—Wang Ping (1962-2013), PRC crosstalk actor—Wang Guowei (1877-1927), noted scholar—Cyndi Wang (1982-), Taiwanese singer and actress—Wang Junxia (1973-), Chinese long-distance runner—Wang Wei (701-761), Tang Dynasty poet—Wang Chong (27-97), rationalist and critical philosopher—Wang Shichong (-621), general of late Sui and opponent of early Tang—Wang Xiaobo (1952-1997), scholar and novelist—Jiro Wang (1981-), Taiwanese singer and actor—Chien-Ming Wang (1980-), Taiwanese starting pitcher for the Washington Nationals in Major League Baseball—Wang Lee-Hom (1976-), Taiwanese-American singer—Wang Ying (character in the "Water Margin")—Wang Xiaofeng (1944-), fourth governor of Hainan—Mu Kung or Tung Wang Kung, God of the Immortals (Taoism)—Wang Qinruo (962-1025), Northern Song dynasty official—Wang Hongwen (1935-1992), one of the Gang of Four—Wang Shuo (1958-), Chinese writer, director and actor—Wang Zhu (-c. 990), Song calligrapher and writer—Wang Yucheng (954-1001) Song dynasty literary figure—Wang Dan (1969-), Chinese dissident, one of the leaders of the Beijing student democracy movement of 1989—Wang Ming (1904-1974), Soviet trained Chinese communist, Comintern and Soviet stooge and left adventurist in the 1930s, fell out with Mao and moved Soviet Union from 1956— |