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Hexagram 3 is named 屯 (zhūn), "Sprouting". Other variations include "difficulty at the beginning", "gathering support", and "hoarding". The meaning of "屯" is collect, store up, stingy, and stationing troops.
Chéng , spelled Ching based on its Cantonese pronunciation; Zhuāng (simplified Chinese: 庄; traditional Chinese: 莊), spelled Ching based on its pronunciation in various Southern Min dialects; Ching is also a Cornish surname, from the Cornish dialect form of the surname Chinn, which originated as a nickname for people with distinctive chins ...
In the pinyin system of romanization (usually used in China), the most common surnames romanized as Cheng are 程 and 成. In 2019 程 was the 44th most common surname in Mainland China. [1] In names romanized in Wade–Giles (usually used in Taiwan), Cheng is most commonly a transcription of 鄭/郑 (pinyin Zhèng).
Romanization of Chinese is the use of the Latin alphabet to transliterate Chinese.Chinese uses a logographic script and its characters do not represent phonemes directly. . There have been many systems using Roman characters to represent Chinese throughout hi
Cheng Nga Ching (Chinese: 鄭雅晴; born 24 January 2000 in Hong Kong) is a Hong Kong professional squash player. [1] As of December 2021, she was ranked number 191 in the world . [ 2 ] She won the 2021 KCC PSA Challenge Cup.
By the 11th century, the I Ching was being read as a work of intricate philosophy, as a jumping-off point for examining great metaphysical questions and ethical issues. [65] Cheng Yi, patriarch of the Neo-Confucian Cheng–Zhu school, read the I Ching as a guide to moral perfection. He described the text as a way to for ministers to form honest ...
Ching (instrument), a Thai and Cambodian musical instrument "Ching" (song), a single from Swami's album Equalize (2007) Ching, a fictional 12-year-old Chinese swordswoman in the TV show Pucca; Qing dynasty of Imperial China, romanized as "Ch'ing" in Wade–Giles; River Ching, a tributary of the River Lea in north east London
Ching Chong, Chinaman, Sitting on a rail. Along came a white man, And chopped off his tail. In 1917, a ragtime piano song entitled "Ching Chong" was co-written by Lee S. Roberts and J. Will Callahan. [5] Its lyrics contained the following words: "Ching, Chong, Oh Mister Ching Chong, You are the king of Chinatown. Ching Chong, I love your sing-song,