Saturday, January 31, 2009

Chinese Mandarin - Yonghe Lamasery




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Yonghe Lamasery

( 2008-07-08 )

Situated on the east side of Yonghegong Street in the northeastern corner of the city, the Yonghe Lamasery is the largest and best-known lamasery in Beijing. The principal components are three exquisite memorial archways and five major halls, all of which stand on a north-south axis. The total
area of the compound calculated from the southernmost memorial archway to the lamasery's northernmost point is 66,400 square meters.

The Yonghe Lamasery was originally built by order of Emperor Kangxi in 1694 to serve as a residence for his son and successor to the throne - Yinzhen. The new residence was given the name the Mansion of the Beile Yin. When his title was later officially raised to that of prince, the name of the
residence was changed to "Residence of Prince Yong." Yinzhen lived here till his ascension to the throne in 1723.

When Yinzhen became Emperor Yongzheng after his father's death, a section of the residential grounds was maintained as a temporary palace to be used by the emperor for short visits, while the other half was turned into a place for the recitation of scriptures. Later, the palace section was razed
by fire and in 1725, while that section of the compound occupied by the Lamas was given the name Yonghe (Harmony and Peace) Lamasery.

Besides the splendid main halls in it, the Yonghe Lamasery has a number of auxiliary buildings lining the courtyards on the east and west, many of which display exotic Lamaist sculptures and paintings. The buildings set along the central axis rise progressively from south to north, and a visitor
entering from the southernmost gate looking north will see a series of roof-ridges rising impressively one above the next.

The lamaseries house a treasury of Buddhist art. To mention a few of the most interesting items: examples of the calligraphy of Qing emperors written on scrolls and inscribed on stelae; bronze lions and incense burners; sculptured images of gods, demons and Buddhas; and Tibetan-style murals.

  Emblems More

* Dancing Beijing -- Beijing 2008 Olympic Emblem

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* Beijing Paralympics Emblem ( 07-10 )
* Environmental Emblem of Beijing 2008 ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing 2008 OYC ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Cultural Festival ( 07-10 )

News More

* Museums to exhibit 1,000 national treasures
* Creating new rituals, Beijing style
* Marine mural unveiled in capital
* Illustrated Olympic giant panda story comes out
* Ten recommended Beijing shopping streets

Meet in Beijing More

* Dance Along the River during the Qingming Festival
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* UK Contemporary Exhibition
* The Russia Star Ballet

Olympic on Beijing's Axis

  Online Tour

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Pnyin - Cuju -- Ancient Chinese Football




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Cuju -- Ancient Chinese Football

( 2008-07-08 )

Football has found its way to the most remote corners of the globe, becoming one of the hottest topics of the day. About 2,500 years ago in China there was a similar game called "Cuju", which, according to the International Football Association, was the origin of football as a sport.

"Cu" ("to kick") and "ju" (a type of leather ball filled with feathers) became popular during the Warring States Period (476-221BC). Back then, cuju was used to train military cavaliers due to the fierce nature of the sport.

During the Han Dynasty (206BC-AD220), the popularity of cuju gradually spread from the army to the royal courts and upper classes. It is said that the Han emperor Wu Di enjoyed the sport. At the same time, cuju games were standardized as rules were established. Football matches were often held
inside the imperial palace. A type of court called "ju" cheng was built especially for cuju matches, with six crescent-shaped goal posts at each end.

The sport was improved during the Tang Dynasty (618-907). First of all, the feather-stuffed ball was replaced by an air-filled ball with a two-layered hull. Also, two different types of goal posts emerged: One was made by setting up posts with a net between them and the other consisted of just one
goal post in the middle of the field.

Cuju flourished during the Song Dynasty (960-1279) due to social and economic development, extending its popularity to every class in society -- from the emperor to ordinary civilians. At that time, professional cuju players were quite popular, and the sport began to take on a commercial edge.
Professional cuju players fell into two groups: One was trained by and performed for the royal court (unearthed copper mirrors and brush pots from the Song often depict professional performances) and the other consisted of civilians who made a living as cuju players.

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  Emblems More

* Dancing Beijing -- Beijing 2008 Olympic Emblem

============================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================

* Beijing Paralympics Emblem ( 07-10 )
* Environmental Emblem of Beijing 2008 ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing 2008 OYC ( 07-10 )
* Emblem of the Beijing Olympic Cultural Festival ( 07-10 )

News More

* Classical piece will ring in ears of winners
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* The Great Wall: most popular tourist attraction
* Wushu to be held during Beijing Olympic
* The Music Makers

Meet in Beijing More

* Passing the Baton in Beijing
* Cameroonian Ballet Meets Argentine Tango
* Historical Dance Drama Staged
* Concert by Macao Chinese Orchestra
* Kataklo Athletic Dance Theatre

Olympic on Beijing's Axis

  Online Tour

============================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================

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Copyright 2003 Ministry of Culture, P.R.China. All rights reserved

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Chinese language - Xuande Incense Burner




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Classics>Collection

Xuande Incense Burner

An incense burner is a vessel in which incense is burned, especially during religious services. The main purpose of incense burners include fumigating clothing, sacrifice and keep a cheerful and tranquil mind during reading because ancient people believed incense was beneficial to study for it can
appease the spirit and inspire the mind.

Xuande is the reigning title of emperor Xuande of Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).

The Xuande incense burner (Xuande Lu), was made during the reign of emperor Xuande of Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and is a general name for all the bronze burners engraved with the characters “宣德” (Xuande) or for bronze burners that have similar patterns with Xuande incense burner.

To satisfy the craze for incense burners, the emperor Xuande ordered officials to import fine copper from Thailand and made them into incense burners in accordance with the patterns of porcelains from the historical records and the famous five kilns (including Ru Kiln, Guan Kiln, Ge Kiln, Jun Kiln
and Ding Kiln, where those kilns are famous for their porcelain making). To assure the quality of incense burners, the craftsmen forged the copper with dozens of costly metals including gold and silver. After being forged ten times, the incense burners would have smooth surfaces and gorgeous
shines. According to the different forging, Xuande incense burners mainly have five colors: chestnut color, eggplant color, birchleaf pear color, brown and Tibetan paper’s color, among which the incense burner with Tibetan paper’s color is most precious.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Speak Chinese - Secret Garden Delivers Oriental Flavor




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Secret Garden Delivers Oriental Flavor

Fionnuala Sherry of the Norwegian/Irish duo Secret Garden plays the violin during a concert at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday, May 2, 2008.

The Norwegian/Irish duo Secret Garden perform at a concert at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday, May 2, 2008.

The Norwegian/Irish duo Secret Garden was back in Beijing for a concert at the Great Hall of the People on Friday.

Rolf Lovland (composer and keyboards) and Fionnuala Sherry (vocals and violin) gave a two-and-half-hour performance, playing many of their hit songs. The crowd sang along to tracks such as "Moongate" and "Lotus" for which the orchestra added a strong oriental flavor that perfectly supplemented the
band's new-age music. Secret Garden also treated fans to "Norturne", the song with which the Norwegian act won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1995.

The band went on to play "Thank you" and "Sometimes a prayer will do" from their new album. Lovland said although the album had so far only been released in Norway, it would soon hit music stores worldwide.

Barring some minor technical issues that caused the guest performers' microphones to go silent, the concert - with its memorable music and distinct gentle melodies - eased the jangled nerves of the enthusiastic audience during China's May Day Holiday.

Secret Garden has played in China five times since 1997. Beijing was the last stop of their most recent tour on the country which began in April.

Secret Garden's lalbums include White Stones (1997), Fairytales (1998), Dawn of a New Century (1999), Dreamcatcher (2001), Once in a Red Moon (2002), and Earthsongs (2005).

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Chinese Mandarin - Dan (female)




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Dan (female)

Princess Tiejing

Tiejing was the princess of the State of Liao and wife of Yang Yanhui, former general of the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127). When aware of the real identity of her husband that Yang Yanhui was the fourth son of Yang Ye, former general of the Northern Song Dynasty, Princess Tiejing stole the
order arrow (token used to give military order in ancient China) which enabled her husband to pass the border and have a reunion with his family members. When Yanhui's real identity was disclosed and the queen mother of Liao wanted to kill him, the Princess prayed for his innocence and had him
pardoned.

Repertoire:Visiting His Mother

Li Yan, the concubine

Li Yan was the concubine of Emperor Muzong of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Under the circumstances when Emperor Muzong passed away and the crown prince was still too young to govern the state, Li Yan, the concubine, ruled the country behind the curtain. When she learned about her father Li
Liang's conspiracy to seize the throne, she entrusted the senior ministers of the imperial court with state affairs. At last, Li Liang was sent to death.

Repertoire: Entering the Court Twice

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

Chinese language - Drum Dance Dragon's Voice




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Drum Dance Dragon's Voice

Presented by the Shanghai Dongfang Youth Dance Troupe, the drum dance, Dragon's Voice, will entertain audiences with traditional Chinese songs and dances from March 26 to 28 at Tianqiao Acrobatic Theater in Beijing.

Over one hundred drums, large or small, are used in the dance to create an overwhelming visual and aural feast. The dance is directed by a famous Chinese director Chen Feihua, and choreographed by a team including Liu Lingli, Ma Lin, He Chuan and Li Nan. Its music is scored by Zhao Guang, a
composer with the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. The stage art is designed by Zhang Jiwen, a national Class-A stage art designer.

The play highlights dragon culture and the drum culture popular in China.

For millennia, the dragon has been a vital part of Chinese culture, and the people consider themselves "descendants of the dragon." The dragon is a symbol of auspiciousness and wisdom. Traditionally, dragons have been believed to have great powers that allow them to make rain and control floods by
striking rivers with their tails, thus diverting floodwaters. Eventually, dragons became a symbol of the country's seat of power: the imperial throne.

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Chinese Mandarin - Exhibition List




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Exhibition List

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Exhibition list

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Friday, January 9, 2009

HSK Exam - Dream in Dunhuang tours Europe




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Dream in Dunhuang tours Europe

Dream in Dunhuang, a stage dance performance based on the legends of the ancient Silk Road, started its European tour in Holland, France, Belgium and Spain for more than two months.

Dream in Dunhuang took its world premiere on 16th Feb, 2008 in Amsterdam and will perform for 47 rounds in ten cities of the four countries in the following two months.

Mogao Grotto in Dunhuang is a profound and comprehensive artistic palace consisting of architecture, painting, and sculpture. It is the largest in scale and most well-preserved artistic treasury of Buddhism in the world. Its artistic value has been honored as the artistic pearl in the orient.
Western scholars recognized it as a library on the wall. To celebrate the centenary of the discovery of the Grotto holding scriptures, Lanzhou Opera House composed and performed the large-scale four-act dancing opera "Great Dream of Dunhuang Grottoes", taking Mogao Grotto as the background. The
opera is about the love story between Mogao, a young artist, and Yueya, a General-in-chief’s daughter. The story reconstructs and deducts a Chinese version of the miserable and graceful love story between Romeo and Juliet.

The creating of Dream in Dunhuang was started in 1998, and debuted in 2000. In the past 7 years, it appeared before the footlights of 20-plus Chinese cities and has had several overseas tours. Statistics show that there have been exactly 400 shows of Dream in Dunhuang by now.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Chinese Class - Year of the Rat Celebration




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Chinese Way>Life

Year of the Rat Celebration

HORSE (1942, 54, 66, 78, 90)

A love for open spaces and needs plenty of room to roam. China's a big place. Go to a travel agent now.

GOAT (1943, 55, 67, 79, 91)

Very creative and a knack of empathizing with others, however tends to follow the pack. Stop trying to please everybody all the time.

MONKEY (1944, 56, 68, 80, 92)

High-risk, carefree attitude to life has caused you a few scratches but nothing too bad. That high energy of yours can really take you places.

ROOSTER (1945, 57, 69, 81, 93)

Quick-thinking, well-groomed and practical. Straightforward person, so let people know about your new insights.

DOG (1946, 58, 70, 82, 94)

High-moral standards and forever the loyal buddy. You have a lot of good friends. The Olympic year is a time to make a lot more.

PIG (1947, 59, 71, 83, 95)

Your year is nearly over so enjoy the last few weeks. Pigs feel their best when everyone else is happy around them so why not throw a party before Chinese New Year just for the sake of it. Who ever needed a reason to throw a party

Pet Rats Popular in the Year of Rat

A girl holds her pet rat in the northeastern city of Tianjin on Friday.

Rats and mice in the wild can be one of the worst pests for mankind, but pet rats and mice are not the same as their wild counterparts.

With minimal space and care requirements, rats and mice are ideal pets for some people, especially in the Year of Rat.

The website tianjindaily.com.cn reports that as the Spring Festival approaches, many people are rushing to pet shops to purchase pet rats for good luck.

A typical pet mouse can cost up to 35 yuan, nearly 5 US dollars. But with a terrarium, food and accessories, you will have to spend at least 200 yuan, or about 28 US dollars. Some rare species may cost several thousand yuan.

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Chinese Character - Introduction in Different Languages




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Introduction in Different Languages

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Chinese, English, Spanish

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese Ancient Painting




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Created in China>Art Treasures>Chinese Crafts and Fine Arts>Chinese Painting>list

Chinese Ancient Painting

AncientChinese paintings can be traced back to as early as 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, when people began to use minerals to draw simple pictures resembling animals, plants, and even human beings on rocks and produce drawings of amazing designs and decorations on the surface of potteries and
laterbronzecontainers. However, only a few of the works have survived over time. The earliest drawings that have been preserved till today were produced onpaperand silk, which were burial articles with a history of over 2,000 years.

By Lu Ji,Ming Dynasty

As far as the subject is concerned, Chinese paintings fall into several categories, such as figure paintings, landscapes, andflower-and-bird paintings. European paintings, introduced into China in 17th century, were called "Western paintings," and the traditional local works, "the Chinese
paintings."

As the representative of Eastern paintings, Chinese paintings greatly differ from the Western counterpart in terms of contents, forms, and styles. The following will give you a more vivid picture of the exotic Chinese paintings.

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Monday, January 5, 2009

Chinese School - Furniture




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Created in China>Art Treasures>Chinese Crafts and Fine Arts>Folk Crafts

Furniture

Pieces of this style of furniture have been handed on as beautiful handicrafts because of their beautiful shapes and exquisite technical craftsmanship. Furniture connoisseurs and collectors have summarized 16 characteristics and eight taboos of Ming Dynasty furniture making, which accurately
describe their features. The 16 characteristics include simple, natural, bold, dignified, elegant, transpose and clean and the taboos include complicated, fat and disordered.

Chinese furniture has an old tradition and long history. Ming Dynasty furniture represents the typical style of Chinese furniture because of its beautiful shapes, good materials and refined skills, and it enjoys great fame in the world.

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Saturday, January 3, 2009

Learn mandarin - Chinese Culture Center




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Chinese Culture Center

Seoul

Comprehensive Activities:

The 4th Chinese Competition

Cultural Center, May 31

Exhibitions
The exhibition of Chinese shadow play Cultural Center, From April 1 to 19
Cui Bingyi's Painting and calligraphy exhibition Cultural Center, From April 22 to 26
"Beijing Welcomes You" photographic exhibition Cultural Center, From May 1 to 30
Exhibition of Shanxi Paper cutting Art Cultural Center, From June 3 to 28

Lecture\Symposium:

"DiscoveringChina" lecture series

Chinese tea culture

Cultural Center, April 26

Confucius's love By Yi Zhongtian Cultural Center May 15

Movies and TV:

Venue: Cultural Center

Shadow Magic April 4
Red River Valley April 11
Gua Sha Treatment April 18
Shower April 25
Grief Over the Yellow May 2
Jasmine Women May 9
Heroic Duo May 16
Gimme Kudos May 23
Letter From An Unknown Women May 30
Mobile Phone June 6
Judge Mama June 13
Who Cares June 20
Ke Ke Xi Li June 27

Club:

Tai Chi Chuan club

11:00 am – 12:00 am, each Saturday

Gu Zheng (zither) club 2:00pm-3:00pm, each Saturday
erh-hu (Chinese 2-string fiddle) club 11:00am-12:00 pm, each Friday
Chinese club (Chinese corner) 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, each Saturday

Library:

11,000 books in collection, 27 kinds of periodicals in Chinese and other languages

9:00 am—12:00 am, 13:30 pm –17:30 pm Tuesday – Saturday

Paris,  Cairo,Benin, Malta,Mauritius,S.Korea

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Learning Mandarin - The 5th Int'l Johannes Brahms Choir Competition













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The 5th Int'l Johannes Brahms Choir Competition




Wernigerode, the colorful town at the foot of the Harz Mountains, hosted one of the most attractive MUSICA MUNDI competitions —— the 5th International Johannes Brahms Choir Festival & Competition. Between July 18 and 22, the scenic town with its half-timbered architecture offered one of its
beautiful market squares in Germany as the ideal background for this festival.





Over five days, with choirs from 45 representative teams in 20 countries, including Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Lithuania, Russia, South Korea and etc, around 1,500 participants staged performances and enjoyed the fabulous choir festival.

The competition featured 5 different categories:

I. With compulsory piece: Mixed Choirs, Male Choirs and Female Choirs.

II. Without compulsory piece: Mixed Choirs, Male Choirs and Female Choirs.

III. With compulsory piece: Chamber Choirs /Vocal Ensembles of Equal Voices and Chamber Choirs /Vocal Ensembles of Mixed Voices.

IV. Without compulsory piece: Children's Choirs, Youth Choirs of Equal Voices and Mixed Youth Choirs.

V. Folklore Competition of Category Winners.

Category winners had the opportunity to take part in the Competition of the Category Winners if nominated by the Jury.





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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Chinese Pinyin - Chinese Lesson




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Guide to Chinese
Living in China


Showing results 1 to 4 of 4
Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: jbradfor

Forum: ZDT Flashcards Forum 10th May 2008, 03:04 AM

Replies: 9

ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Views: 836

Posted By jbradfor


Re: ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Luobot, thanks for the pointers on updating CEDICT entries. As you suggest, I followed the MDBG
link. Turns out they make it incredibly easy! Just lookup any word or phrase...



Forum: ZDT Flashcards Forum 5th December 2007, 10:56 AM

Replies: 9

ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Views: 836

Posted By jbradfor


Re: ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Luobot, thanks for that information. I'll take a look.

Bogleg (Chris), which version of CEDICT is used in ZDT now? Can I install the latest version? I
figure I should ensure I'm using the latest...



Forum: ZDT Flashcards Forum 27th November 2007, 11:07 PM

Replies: 9

ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Views: 836

Posted By jbradfor


Re: ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Another thought. I have come across several entries in the CEDICT dictionary that I think may be
wrong; they are typically either duplicate entries, or there is a definition that belongs to a...



Forum: ZDT Flashcards Forum 27th November 2007, 05:40 AM

Replies: 9

ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

Views: 836

Posted By jbradfor


Re: ZDT: Annotator Error with 说

There are tens if not hundreds of characters that have multiple pronunciation; how should ZDT
handle them? Putting the most common one first is probably a good idea, and for many characters
that...



Showing results 1 to 4 of 4





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