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Mei Hatsume, a character in the manga and anime series My Hero Academia; Mei Misaki (見崎 鳴), a character in the novel Another; Mei Narumiya (成宮 鳴), a character in the manga series Ace of Diamond; Mei Narusegawa (成瀬川 メイ), a character in the manga series Love Hina; Mei Sunohara (春原 芽衣), a character in the visual novel ...
Chinese calligraphy of the character representing the surname "Méi." Mei ( Chinese : 梅 ; pinyin : Méi ) is a romanized spelling of a Chinese surname , transcribed in the Mandarin dialect. In Hong Kong and other Cantonese -speaking regions, the name may be transliterated as Mui or Moy . [ 1 ]
Meiling, also spelled Mei Ling, Mei-ling or May-ling, is a feminine Chinese given name. According to Taiwan 's 2010 census, it was the third most popular name for women, with 27,914 having the name.
The plum blossom, known as the meihua (Chinese: 梅花; pinyin: méihuā), is a symbol for resilience and perseverance in the face of adversity, because plum blossoms often bloom most vibrantly even amidst the harsh winter snow. [2] [3] As the plum tree can usually grow for a long time, ancient trees are found throughout China. Huangmei county ...
Taiwanese politician Mei Feng had criticised the official English name of the state, "Republic of China", for failing to translate the Chinese character "Min" (Chinese: 民; English: people) according to Sun Yat-sen's original interpretations, while the name should instead be translated as "the People's Republic of China", which confuses with ...
Mei Mei (Chinese: 妹妹 or 美美) is a feminine call name of Chinese origin, means "younger sister". Mei Mei, MeiMei, Mei-Mei, Meimei, or Mei-mei may also refer to:
Mai is a surname with Chinese origin. It is transliterated as Mei in Chinese and Mae in Korean but is very rare in Korea . It is also the Chinese surname Mai which is transliterated as Mạch in Vietnamese .
Prunus mume, or its common name mei, is a Chinese tree species of the genus Prunus. Along with bamboo, the plant most intimately associated with art, literature and everyday life in China, [ 2 ] where it was later introduced to the remaining Sinosphere (Korea, Vietnam, and Japan).