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Die da (Chinese: 跌打; pinyin: diē dǎ; Jyutping: dit 3 daa 2; lit. 'fall [and] hit') or dit da is a traditional Chinese medicine discipline of used to treating trauma and injuries such as bone fractures, sprains, and bruises. Methods including bone-setting and occasional use of topical preparations such as the dit da jow.
[1] [2] The formula is known as Dit da jow in Cantonese or die da jiu in Mandarin. [3] The liniment was used to treat fractures, broken bones and injuries suffered in combat. It is used today by practitioners of Chinese medicine to treat pain or trauma from backache, arthritis, strains, bruises, and sprains.
Dit da jow (Jyutping: dit3 daa2 zau2; pinyin: Diē dǎ jiǔ) is a common Chinese liniment used as traditional medicine in the belief it can reduce the pain from ...
King Dzit-dzang: Peace dam: Re-established province as of 12 August 1991. Bắc Ninh: Vitam et misericordiam tribuisti mihi, et visitatio tua custodivit spiritum meum (You gave me life and showed me kindness, and in your providence watched over my spirit) Lê Văn Thịnh: Ninhphuc Pagoda: Re-established province as of 6 November 1996. Hưng Yên
Dit Da Jow (whose name is loosely translated as "injury healing wine") is one of several kinds of external liniments used both for treatment of injuries and athletic injury prevention. Dit Da Jow is sometimes referred to as a blood stasis liniment because it's believed that the herbs commonly used help to disperse the blocked blood and swelling ...
Dit name, an alternative family name, e.g., in French Canadian historical traditions Dit Clapper (1907–1978), Canadian ice hockey player Information technology
It uses da, the root of word dāna, in its hymns to refer to the act of giving to those in distress. Ralph T. H. Griffith , for example, translates Book 10, Hymn 117 of the Rig veda as follows: The Gods have not ordained hunger to be our death: even to the well-fed man comes death in varied shape,
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