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YI Sheng (born June 13, 1972, in Beijing, China) is an official of the Chinese Baseball Association.He coached the China national baseball team in the World Baseball Classics in 2009, 2013 and 2017, as well as the 2002 Asia Games, 2005 Asian Baseball Championship, 2010 Asian Games and 2008 Olympics.
The Yi play a number of traditional musical instruments, including large plucked and bowed string instruments, [41] as well as wind instruments called bawu and mabu . The Yi also play the hulu sheng, though unlike other minority groups in Yunnan, the Yi do not play the hulu sheng for courtship or love songs (aiqing).
Yisheng Yishi (一生一世), meaning "lifetime", may refer to: 1314 sounds like "一生一世" But Always, 2014 Chinese-Hong Kong romantic drama film; Forever and Ever, 2021 Chinese romantic television series
Forever and Ever (Chinese: 一生一世) is a 2021 contemporary Chinese romantic television series, starring Ren Jialun and Bai Lu.The series is based on the novel Yi Sheng Yi Shi Mei Ren Gu (一生一世美人骨) by Mo Bao Fei Bao.
Yusheng literally means "raw fish" but since "fish" (魚) is commonly conflated with its homophone "abundance" (餘), Yúshēng (魚生) is interpreted as a homophone for Yúshēng (餘升), meaning an increase in abundance. Therefore, yusheng is considered a symbol of abundance, prosperity and vigor.
A second meaning of shen refers to the human spirit or psyche that is seen in the body as luster or vigor and in the mind as vitality and enthusiasm; it is the basic power or agency within humans that accounts for life, and in order to further life to its fullest potential, the spirit (Shen) is transformed to actualize potential (Jing 精 ).
Yat sang ho kau (Chinese: 一生何求; Jyutping: Jat1 sang1 ho4 kau4; pinyin: Yīshēng hé qiú) is a Cantonese-language Hong Kong album by Danny Chan, released by Warner Music (WEA) in June 1989.
Ng Yi Sheng (simplified Chinese: 黄毅圣; traditional Chinese: 黄毅聖; pinyin: Huáng Yì Shèng; born 1980) is a Singaporean gay writer. [1] He has published a collection of his poems entitled last boy, which won the Singapore Literature Prize, and a documentary book on gay, lesbian and bisexual Singaporeans called SQ21: Singapore Queers in the 21st Century in 2006.