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The Hanyu Shuiping Kaoshi (HSK; Chinese: 汉语水平考试; pinyin: Hànyǔ Shuǐpíng Kǎoshì), translated as the Chinese Proficiency Test, [1] is the People's Republic of China's standardized test of proficiency in the Standard Chinese language for non-native speakers.
Japanese figure skater and ice show producer Yuzuru Hanyu has presented more than 60 different skating programs in the course of his career, among them 26 competition programs which earned him back-to-back Olympic titles in 2014 and 2018, the first Super Slam in the men's singles discipline, and 19 world records among other achievements.
Hanyu is the first Asian male skater and second Japanese after Shizuka Arakawa in 2006 to win Olympic gold. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Continues with Wings was scheduled two months after Hanyu's victory at the 2018 Winter Olympics to commemorate his historic achievements and express his gratitude to skaters who had inspired and supported him in course of his ...
Gift tells the story of Hanyu's life and future on ice, combining elaborate on-screen narration with live skating performances by Hanyu. The show had a duration of 150 minutes and featured 12 programs performed at the athletic level of skating competitions, including a six-minute warm-up session followed by Hanyu's short program Introduction ...
Hanyu stated that he had been searching for a piano piece for a long time and a short program "with an expression that only Yuzuru Hanyu can do". [156] He also stated that Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso was a piece he had always wanted to skate to but felt that a piano version would suit his style better than the original composition for ...
Yuzuru Hanyu has scored 19 world records in international competition, the most among single skaters since the introduction of the ISU Judging System in 2003. [2] He set new highest scores seven times in the +5/-5 Grade of Execution System, [note 1] three in the short program, two in the free skating, and another two in the combined total score.
Han Yu was born in 768, [5] in Heyang (河陽, present day Mengzhou) in Henan to a family of noble lineage. [6] His father worked as a minor official but died when Han Yu was two. He was then raised in the family of his older brother, Han Hui (韓會). [2] He was a student of philosophical writings and Confucian thought.
It is the 15th name on the Hundred Family Surnames poem. In 2003, Han (韩) is ranked 25th in China in terms of the number of bearers at around 8 million persons. [1] In 2019 it was the 28th most common surname in Mainland China. [2] Less common Chinese surnames romanized as Han include: 寒 (Hán) and 汉/漢 (Hàn). [citation needed]