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  2. Wu (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_(surname)

    Several other, less common Chinese surnames are also transliterated into English as "Wu", but with different tones: 武 Wǔ , 伍 Wǔ , 仵 Wǔ , 烏 Wū (also Wù ), 鄔 Wū and 巫 Wū . Wu (or Woo or Wou ) is also the Cantonese transliteration of the Chinese surname 胡 (Mandarin Hu ), used in Hong Kong, and by overseas Chinese of Cantonese ...

  3. Wu Chinese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Chinese

    Wu (simplified Chinese: 吴语; traditional Chinese: 吳語; pinyin: Wúyǔ; Wugniu and IPA: 6 wu-gniu 6 [ɦu˩.nʲy˦] (Shanghainese), 2 ghou-gniu 6 [ɦou˨.nʲy˧] ()) is a major group of Sinitic languages spoken primarily in Shanghai, Zhejiang province, and parts of Jiangsu province, especially south of the Yangtze River, [2] which makes up the cultural region of Wu.

  4. Wu (surname 武) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_(surname_武)

    from Wu Luo (武羅), which is said to be either the name of a prehistoric state in present-day Guangxi or an official of the prehistoric Xia dynasty [1]; from the posthumous title of Duke Wu of Song (r. 765–748 BCE), Spring and Autumn period ruler of Song, in present-day Shangqiu, Henan

  5. Wu (surname 伍) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_(surname_伍)

    Wu (Chinese: 伍; pinyin: Wǔ; Jyutping: Ng5) is a Chinese surname.It is the 89th name on the Hundred Family Surnames poem. [1] It means ‘five’ in Chinese, an alternative form of the character 五. [2]

  6. Wu (shaman) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_(shaman)

    Shaman is the common English translation of Chinese wu, but some scholars [2] maintain that the Siberian shaman and Chinese wu were historically and culturally different shamanic traditions.

  7. Mu (negative) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu_(negative)

    Chinese traditional character for Wu. In the Sinosphere, the word 無, realized in Japanese and Korean as mu and in Standard Chinese as wu, [a] meaning 'to lack' or 'without', is a key term in the vocabulary of various East Asian philosophical and religious traditions, such as Buddhism and Taoism.

  8. Wen and wu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wen_and_wu

    The resort to warfare (wu) was an admission of bankruptcy in the pursuit of wen [civility or culture]. Consequently, it should be a last resort... Herein lies the pacifist bias of the Chinese tradition... Expansion through wen... was natural and proper; whereas expansion by wu, brute force and conquest, was never to be condoned.” [3]

  9. Wu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu

    Wu Chinese (吴语; 吳語), a subgroup of Chinese languages now spoken in the Wu region; Wuyue culture (吳越文化), a regional Chinese culture in the Wu region; Wu (state) (Chinese: 吳; pinyin: Wú; Old Chinese: * ŋʷˤa), a kingdom during the Spring and Autumn period 771–476 BCE Suzhou or Wu (苏州; 蘇州; Sūzhōu), its eponymous ...