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Meaning(s) (in English) Daan Chi Sau 单黐手: 單黐手: daan 1 chi 1 sau 2: dān chī shǒu single sticky hands [4] Luk Sau 碌手 (as simp.) luk 1 sau 2: lù shǒu rolling arms Seung Chi Sau 双黐手: 雙黐手: seung 1 chi 1 sau 2: shuāng chī shǒu double sticky hands Chi Geuk 黐脚: 黐腳: chi 1 geuk 3: chī jiǎo sticky feet
[23] Chan's work also received a positive review in The Guardian newspaper from the art critic Robert Clark who wrote "Suki Chan's art makes us wonder in more ways than one. It enables us to treasure the wonder of the world through daring to suggest the dreadful cost of the loss of such wonderful phenomena."
Su Yu-chang (Chinese: 蘇昱彰; pinyin: Sū Yùzhāng; () 24 June 1940 – () 29 April 2019), [1] was a Taiwanese martial artist, scholar and practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine who devoted his life to teaching kung fu, traditional Chinese philosophy and medicine all over the world.
The original pronunciation of 穌 has been reconstructed as *s.ŋˤa in Old Chinese, but this had already developed into su by the time of Middle Chinese. [5] The addition of the grass radical suggests its original meaning was its use describing varieties of the mint perilla, but its general meaning today is as an abbreviation for Suzhou and replacement for a related word meaning "revive".
Tin's personal bodyguard. She helps Tin carry out all his devious plans. She is also very skilled at Chinese culture, especially Kung Fu and classical Chinese language. Dickson Li 李家聲 as Ha Song Guk 夏桑菊 (same pronunciation as Xiasangju) Vincent Cheung 張漢斌 as Ha Fu Cou 夏枯草 (same pronunciation as "Prunella vulgaris")
Rebecca Chan as Pak Ching-ching; King Doi-yum as Sit Bing; Lau Kong as Lau-wan Koi-see; Yung Wai-man as Ngau Yuk-tong; Ng Ka-lai as Muk-yung Sheung; Leung Kit-wah as Suen Sau-ching; Au-yeung Yiu-chuen as Truthful Monk; Leung Hung-wah as Si-hung Chak-sing; Yan Pak as Yuk Lo-cha; Chan Ka-yee as Kung-suen Lan; Lee Lung-kei as Fa Yuet-lau; Lee ...
Chen Kuan-tai (Chinese: 陳觀泰; born 24 September 1945) is a Hong Kong martial arts actor, director, and action choreographer. Chen rose to fame in the early 1970s for his movies with the Shaw Brothers Studio and is credited as being one of the film company's first professionally trained martial artists.
The Last Message (Chinese: 天才與白痴) is a 1975 Hong Kong comedy film directed by and starring Michael Hui, and co-starring Samuel Hui, with a cameo appearance by Ricky Hui. This is the second film of the Hui Brothers.