enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Naomi Wu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naomi_Wu

    In 2018, a reporter from Vice spent three days with Wu in Shenzhen, exploring the city, meeting Wu's friends, photographing Wu's home, and describing in depth the local creative history and Wu's recent creation, the Sino:Bit, [21] a single-board microcontroller for computer education in China, and the first Chinese open-source hardware product to be certified by the Open Source Hardware ...

  3. Ruqun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruqun

    The term yichang is composed of the Chinese characters:《衣》 and 《裳》, where yi (Chinese: 衣) refers to the upper garment while the chang (裳; cháng) refers to the lower garment, which can be either the Chinese skirt, qun, or the Chinese trousers, ku and kun. [6]: 47–50, 54 The character yi is also a generic word for "clothing". [10]

  4. List of hanfu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hanfu

    An unpleated skirt which is composed of two pieces of fabric sewn to the same waistband. The middle part of the skirt overlap and are not sewn together. [20] Song Baidiequn 百迭裙 A one-piece pleated skirt; the top is narrow and the bottom is wide. [20] Song Sanjianqun 三裥裙 A skirt made of 4 skirts pieces sewn together. [20] Song Zhejianqun

  5. Baidiequn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baidiequn

    Baidiequn (Chinese: 百迭裙), also known as Hundred-change skirt, refers to an ancient style of qun (Chinese: 裙; lit. 'skirt') worn by Han Chinese women in ancient China and is currently worn as a lower garment item in Hanfu. [1] [2] The baidiequn is typically a long, wrap-around densely pleated skirt with two flat surfaces at each end of ...

  6. Qun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qun

    Qun (Chinese: 裙; pinyin: qún; Jyutping: kwan4; lit. 'skirt'), referred as chang (Chinese: 裳; pinyin: cháng) prior to the Han dynasty, [1] chang (Chinese: 常) and xiachang (Chinese: 下常), [2] and sometimes referred as an apron, [3] is a generic term which refers to the Chinese skirts used in Hanfu, especially those worn as part of ruqun, and in Chinese opera costume.

  7. Vienna Hotels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_Hotels

    The Chinese slogan is "五星体验 二星消费" (wǔxīng tǐyàn èrxīng xiāofèi). [4] The company operates the brands Vienna Hotel [note 2], 3 Best Inn [note 3], Venus Hotel [note 4] and Vienna International Hotel [note 5]. [5] Previously two of the brands were named Venus Crown Hotel [6] and Venus International Hotel [7]. [8]

  8. Chinese tourist who alleged rape in Maldives luxury resort ...

    www.aol.com/chinese-tourist-alleged-rape...

    June 21, 2023 at 2:11 AM A view of a jetty in Maldives. A Chinese national has alleged she was raped by a Ritz-Carlton resort staff during holiday (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

  9. Qixiong ruqun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qixiong_ruqun

    The one-piece style qixiong ruqun is a traditional Chinese one-piece skirt which is tied like a wrap-skirt. The two-piece style qixiong ruqun consists of two pieces of fabrics. [ 23 ] It is presented as two pieces of fabric incompletely sewn together on the side to form a rear and a front section and with two sets of ties. [ 24 ]