Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tongyang Group, also spelled Tong Yang Group, is a South Korean conglomerate founded in 1957 by Lee Yang-gu, a confectionery businessman who had decided to expand into the cement industry. Over the following decades it expanded to include holdings as diverse as financial services companies and a basketball team.
Tongyang or Tong Yang may refer to: Tongyang Group, South Korean conglomerate; Tongyang Confectionery, former name of Orion Confectionery, South Korean company formerly owned by the Tongyang Group; Tongyang Daegu Orions, former name of Goyang Orions, South Korean basketball team formerly owned by the Tongyang Group
Tong Yang-tze (born 1942), also known as Grace Tong, is a Taiwanese artist. She is one of Taiwan ’s foremost calligraphers . She is known for creating very large works in a very small studio.
TYM CORPORATION is a South Korean agricultural machinery manufacturing company headquartered in Seoul, South Korea with operations in more than 40 countries. [3] The company began in 1951, founded in Busan, South Korea, as the Tong Yang Moolsan [4] and was renamed "TYM" in 2020. [5]
Sampyo Cement (KRX: 038500) is a South Korean cement, concrete and chemical company headquartered in Seoul.It produces portland cement products. It was established in 1957 as Tong Yang Cement by Lee Yang-gu as the second of his many companies which would grow into the Tongyang Group, and was also later known as Tongyang Cement and Energy.
The former TBC offices in Yeouido, later the KBS Annex. Tongyang Broadcasting Company (TBC, June 26 1964 – November 30, 1980, Tongyang is the Korean word for "Oriental" [1]) was a South Korean commercial television station which was merged by the government with KBS.
A tong (Chinese: 堂; pinyin: táng; Jyutping: tong4; Cantonese Yale: tòhng; lit. 'hall') [1]: 53 is a type of organization found among Chinese immigrants predominantly living in the United States, with smaller numbers in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom.
A tongyangxi and her child husband on their wedding day, Republican Era. A tongyangxi marriage certificate from the Ming dynasty (1588). Tongyangxi (traditional Chinese: 童養媳; simplified Chinese: 童养媳; pinyin: tóngyǎngxí), also known as Shim-pua marriage in Min Nan (Chinese: 媳婦仔; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: sin-pū-á or sim-pū-á; and in phonetic Hokkien transcription using Chinese ...