enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Temu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temu

    Temu (/ ˈ t iː m uː / ⓘ TEE-moo) is an online marketplace operated by the Chinese e-commerce company PDD Holdings, which is owned by Colin Huang. [9] [8] [10] It offers heavily discounted consumer goods [11] mostly shipped to consumers directly from China.

  3. Taoist philosophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taoist_philosophy

    Bagua diagram from Zhao Huiqian's (趙撝謙) Liushu benyi (六書本義, c. 1370s).. The Daodejing (also known as the Laozi after its purported author, terminus ante quem 3rd-century BCE) has traditionally been seen as the central and founding Taoist text, though historically, it is only one of the many different influences on Taoist thought, and at times, a marginal one at that. [12]

  4. List of Chinese encyclopedias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_encyclopedias

    Modern China: Chinese Wikipedia: Chronologically first Chinese online encyclopedia but third by the number of articles 2005: Modern China: Hudong: Probably the largest Chinese online encyclopedia 2006: Modern China: Baidu Baike: One of the two largest Chinese-language collaborative web-based encyclopedia 1989-2019: Modern China: Zhonghua Dadian ...

  5. Mawangdui Silk Texts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mawangdui_Silk_Texts

    The Chinese characters in the silk texts are often only fragments of the characters used in later traditional versions. Many characters are formed by combining two simpler characters: one indicating a general category of meaning, and the other to guide pronunciation.

  6. Baopuzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baopuzi

    The eponymous title Baopuzi derives from Ge Hong's hao (號), the hao being a type of sobriquet or pseudonym. Baopuzi literally means "The Master Who Embraces Simplicity;" [1] compounded from the words bao meaning "embrace; hug; carry; hold in both arms; cherish"; pu meaning "uncarved wood", also being a Taoist metaphor for a "person's original nature; simple; plain"; and, zi meaning "child ...

  7. Guoyu (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guoyu_(book)

    Guoyu overlaps with the period, people, events in the Zuo Zhuan. [7] And during the end of the Han dynasty it was called the preface of the Zuo Zhuan. Scholars like Xu Gan mention it in their work including the Balanced Discourses though the tradition died out.

  8. Möng Mao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Möng_Mao

    In Chinese literature, Möng Mao was called Luchuan (Chinese: 麓川), first recorded in Yuanshi as the name of the administrative division "Luchuan Circuit" (Chinese: 麓川路). [7] Some of literature also called Mong Mao as Baiyi (Chinese: 百夷 ), but most of the time this is a collective name of all the ethnic groups in south west of ...

  9. Yiguandao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yiguandao

    Yiguandao / I-Kuan Tao (traditional Chinese: 一貫道; simplified Chinese: 一贯道; pinyin: Yīguàn Dào; Wade–Giles: I 1-Kuan 4 Tao 4), [α] meaning the Consistent Way or Persistent Way, is a Chinese salvationist religious sect that emerged in the late 19th century, in Shandong, to become China's most important redemptive society in the 1930s and 1940s, especially during the Japanese ...