Foot In Chinese Language

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  foot in chinese language: Vocabulary and Handbook of the Chinese Language Justus Doolittle, 1872
  foot in chinese language: A Syllabic Dictionary of the Chinese Language Samuel Wells Williams, 1909
  foot in chinese language: Chinese-English Dictionary of the vernacular or spoken language of Amoy, with the principal variations of the Chang-Chew and Chin-Chew dialects Carstairs Douglas, 1873
  foot in chinese language: Traditional Chinese Hand and Foot Massage 吴更伟, 郝东方, 2001-01-01 Written for medical practitioners, but of interest to students of massage therapy, this new volume covers the history of hand and foot massage in traditional Chinese medicine, anatomy and related acupoints, treatment of 79 diseases and more.
  foot in chinese language: Prosodic Morphology in Mandarin Chinese Shengli Feng, 2017-12-14 It is not entirely clear if modern Chinese is a monosyllabic or disyllabic language. Although a disyllabic prosodic unit of some sort has long been considered by many to be at play in Chinese grammar, the intuition is not always rigidly fleshed out theoretically in the area of Chinese morphology. In this book, Shengli Feng applies the theoretical model of prosodic morphology to Chinese morphology to provide the theoretical clarity regarding how and why Mandarin Chinese words are structured in a particular way. All of the facts generated by the system of prosodic morphology in Chinese provide new perspectives for linguistic theory, as well as insights for teaching Chinese and studying of Chinese poetic prosody.
  foot in chinese language: Feet and Footwear Margo DeMello, 2009-09-10 Take a walk in someone else's shoes in this fascinating examination of shoes and feet around the world! This one-of-a-kind A-Z reference work contains over 150 fascinating entries and intriguing sidebars that look at feet and adornment of feet across the many cultures of the world throughout time. A wide range of international and multicultural topics are covered, including foot binding, fetishes, diseases of the foot, customs and beliefs related to the foot, shoe construction, myths and folktales featuring feet or shoes, the history of footwear, iconic brands and types of shoes, important celebrities associated with shoes, and the types of footwear worn around the world. This exhaustive compilation is ideal for students and general readers interested in the human body, fashion, and medicine, and even scholars looking for more in-depth coverage on the social and cultural uses of the body will find it as a useful starting point in their research. Cross-references, suggestions for further reading, and a full bibliography of print and electronic resources are valuable tools for all readers. Students can use this reference work to draw cross-cultural comparisons, as well as study the evolution of footwear in terms of social, religious, and ethnic parameters. Aside from iconic American brands and types of shoes, this volume will also look at how feet are treated and viewed around the globe: removing shoes upon entering a house, washing feet for religious purposes, giving feet the spa treatment, and covering feet up for social customs. Perfect for undergraduate and high school students studying anthropology and world culture.
  foot in chinese language: A Syllabic Dictionary of the Chinese Language Arranged According to the Wu-fang Yüan Yin Samuel Wells Williams, 1909
  foot in chinese language: A Dictionary of the Chinese Language Robert Morrison, 1819
  foot in chinese language: An Alphabetic Dictionary of the Chinese Language in the Foochow Dialect Robert Samuel Maclay, 1870
  foot in chinese language: Syntax-Phonology Interface Hongming Zhang, 2016-11-25 This book centers on theoretical issues of phonology-syntax interface based on tone sandhi in Chinese dialects. It uses patterns in tone sandhi to study how speech should be divided into domains of various sizes or levels. Tone sandhi refers to tonal changes that occur to a sequence of adjacent syllables or words. The size of this sequence (or the domain) is determined by various factors, in particular the syntactic structure of the words and the original tones of the words. Chinese dialects offer a rich body of data on tone sandhi, and hence great evidence for examining the phonology-syntax interface, and for examining the resulting levels of domains (the prosodic hierarchy). Syntax-Phonology Interface: Argumentation from Tone Sandhi in Chinese Dialects is an extremely valuable text for graduate students and scholars in the fields of linguistics and Chinese.
  foot in chinese language: A Vocabulary and Hand-Book of the Chinese Language Justus Doolittle, 2023-05-08 Reprint of the original, first published in 1872. The publishing house Anatiposi publishes historical books as reprints. Due to their age, these books may have missing pages or inferior quality. Our aim is to preserve these books and make them available to the public so that they do not get lost.
  foot in chinese language: Across China on Foot Edwin John Dingle, 1911
  foot in chinese language: The Routledge Encyclopedia of the Chinese Language Sin-Wai Chan, 2016-04-14 The Routledge Encyclopedia of the Chinese Language is an invaluable resource for language learners and linguists of Chinese worldwide, those interested readers of Chinese literature and cultures, and scholars in Chinese studies. Featuring the research on the changing landscape of the Chinese language by a number of eminent academics in the field, this volume will meet the academic, linguistic and pedagogical needs of anyone interested in the Chinese language: from Sinologists to Chinese linguists, as well as teachers and learners of Chinese as a second language. The encyclopedia explores a range of topics: from research on oracle bone and bronze inscriptions, to Chinese language acquisition, to the language of the mass media. This reference offers a guide to shifts over time in thinking about the Chinese language as well as providing an overview of contemporary themes, debates and research interests. The editors and contributors are assisted by an editorial board comprised of the best and most experienced sinologists world-wide. The reference includes an introduction, written by the editor, which places the assembled texts in their historical and intellectual context. The Encyclopedia of the Chinese Language is destined to be valued by scholars and students as a vital research resource.
  foot in chinese language: Vocabulary and Hand-book of the Chinese Language . . . Romanized in the Mandarin Dialect Justus Doolittle, 1872
  foot in chinese language: China on Foot Edwin Dingle, Sheba Blake, 2017-04-19 Edwin Dingle's book China on Foot details his trip through Hong Kong and Shanghai, and finally into Tibet, where he would be one of the first Westerners to enter a Tibetan Monastery. There he learned certain advanced spiritual forms of yogic breathing and meditation, which later inform his spiritual practices. Later Dingle would change his name (who wouldn't?) to Ding Le Mei, which was given to him by his spiritual guide in Tibet. This book is a recount of his trip through China in the early 1900s, and is good as a travelogue for that period: it's entertaining, has a solid amount of detail about cities and villages, contains elements of China's geography, politics, religion, native peoples, animals, and the difficulty of traveling through such unforgiving territory. Dingle falls into the category of gentleman explorers of China for whom the journey was far greater than the destination, preparation was minimal, and caution was ultimately thrown to the wind.
  foot in chinese language: China and the Chinese: Their Religion, Character, Customs, and Manufactures Henry Charles Sirr, 1849
  foot in chinese language: Proverbs and Common Sayings from the Chinese Arthur Henderson Smith, 1902
  foot in chinese language: Proverbs and Common Sayings from the Chinese Together with Much Unrelated Matter, Interspersed with Observations on Chinese Things-in-general Arthur H. Smith, 1902
  foot in chinese language: Proverbs and Common Sayings from the Chinese, Together with Much Related and Unrelated Matter, Interpersed with Observations on Chinese Things in General Arthur Henderson Smith, 1914
  foot in chinese language: The Oxford History of Phonology B. Elan Dresher, Harry van der Hulst, 2022 This volume is the first to provide an up-to-date and comprehensive history of phonology from the earliest known examples of phonological thinking, through the rise of phonology as a field in the twentieth century, and up to the most recent advances. The volume is divided into five parts. Part I offers an account of writing systems along with chapters exploring the great ancient and medieval intellectual traditions of phonological thought that form the foundation of later thinking and continue to enrich phonological theory. Chapters in Part II describe the important schools and individuals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries who shaped phonology as an organized scientific field. Part III examines mid-twentieth century developments in phonology in the Soviet Union, Northern and Western Europe, and North America; it continues with precursors to generative grammar, and culminates in a chapter on Chomsky and Halle's The Sound Pattern of English (SPE). Part IV then shows how phonological theorists responded to SPE with respect to derivations, representations, and phonology-morphology interaction. Theories discussed include Dependency Phonology, Government Phonology, Constraint-and-Repair theories, and Optimality Theory. The part ends with a chapter on the study of variation. Finally, chapters in Part V look at new methods and approaches, covering phonetic explanation, corpora and phonological analysis, probabilistic phonology, computational modelling, models of phonological learning, and the evolution of phonology. This in-depth exploration of the history of phonology provides new perspectives on where phonology has been and sheds light on where it could go next.
  foot in chinese language: The Chinese at Home James Dyer Ball, 1911
  foot in chinese language: Chinese Lexical Semantics Pengyuan Liu, Qi Su, 2013-12-12 This book constitutes the refereed selected papers from the 14th Chinese Lexical Semantics Workshop, CLSW 2013, held in Zhengzhou, China, in May 2013. The 68 full papers and 4 short papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 153 submissions. They are organized in topical sections covering all major topics of lexical semantics; lexical resources; corpus linguistics and applications on natural language processing.
  foot in chinese language: A dictionary of the Chinese language, in three parts Robert Morrison, 1819
  foot in chinese language: The Chinese at Home, Or the Man of Tong and His Land James Dyer Ball, 1912
  foot in chinese language: The HSK Guide to Vocabulary, Chinese characters, and Grammar Points : For all the six Levels of the Chinese Language Proficiency Exam Muhammad Wolfgang Schmidt, 2015-11-26 This book is intended for Western students of the Chinese language who wish to take the Chinese language proficiency exam ((??????Hànyu Shuipíng Kaoshì), HSK) either for academic reasons when planning to enroll for studies at a university in Mainland China or for any other professional or personal reasons. This book contains lists of vocabulary and Chinese characters that students are required to know for the six different levels of the HSK exam. It is intended as a reference guide to essential vocabulary and Chinese characters as well as to the grammar aspects that will be requested within the exam in one of the various ways of the communicative tasks assigned to the candidate. This book should be used in conjunction with the official monolingual textbooks available for each level of the HSK exam as a guide of bilingual reference throughout the preparation process for the exam at each proficiency level. There is an optional interactive multimedia application that can be used in combination with the book, its features and benefits are described on the last two pages of the book. The application can be downloaded free of charge by anyone who has purchased a copy of the book.
  foot in chinese language: Twentieth-century Chinese Translation Theory Tak-hung Leo Chan, 2004-01-01 Past attempts at writing a history of Chinese translation theory have been bedeviled by a chronological approach, which often forces the writer to provide no more than a list of important theories and theorists over the centuries. Or they have stretched out to almost every aspect related to translation in China, so that the historical/political backdrop that had an influence on translation theorizing turns out to be more important than the theories themselves. In the present book, the author hopes to devote exclusive attention to the ideas themselves. The approach adopted centers around eight key issues that engaged the attention of theorists through the course of the twentieth century, in the hope that a historical account will be presented that is not time-bound. On the basis of 38 articles translated into English by teachers and scholars of translation, the author has written four essays discussing the Chinese characteristics of this body of theory. Separately they focus on the impressionistic, the modern, the postcolonial, and the poststructuralist approaches deployed by leading Chinese theorists from 1901 to 1998. It is hoped that publication of this book will make possible cross-cultural dialogue with translation academics in the West, although the general reader will find much firsthand information on Chinese thinking about translation.
  foot in chinese language: Essays on the Chinese Language Thomas Watters, 1889
  foot in chinese language: Literatures of the World and the Future of Comparative Literature , 2023-08-14 The 2019 congress of the International Comparative Literature Association attracted many hundreds of scholars from all around the world to Macau. This volume contains a modest selection of papers to discuss the four hottest fields of the discipline: the future of comparison, the position of national and diaspora literature in the context of globalization, the importance of translation, and the concepts of world literature. The contributions cover huge geographical and cultural areas, but pay special attention to the connections between Western (both American and European) and Asian (especially Indian and East-Asian) literatures. The literatures of the world might be different but they are also connected.
  foot in chinese language: Syllable, Stress, and Sign Jeroen van de Weijer, 2023-03-20 Representing Phonological Detail Part I: Segmental Structure and Representations Part II: Syllable, Stress and Sign Part II of Representing Phonological Detail focuses on the latest phonological research on suprasegmental structure and sign language. The first main theme in this volume is syllable structure, touching on phonotactics, syllabification, gemination, syllable weight, diphthongization, and other rules. The other main theme is tone and stress, including issues in data collection, the assignment of primary and secondary stress, resolution of stress clashes, lexical accent, and syntax-tone interaction. The final section is on sign language, with special attention paid to iconicity, phonological processes, and the relation between phonetic and phonological representation.
  foot in chinese language: The Granite Monthly Henry Harrison Metcalf, John Norris McClintock, 1899
  foot in chinese language: The Granite Monthly , 1899
  foot in chinese language: The Junior Encyclopedia Britannica L. Brent Vaughan, 1897
  foot in chinese language: Hill's Practical Reference Library of General Knowledge Thomas Edie Hill, 1905
  foot in chinese language: Aching for Beauty Ping Wang, 2002 An exploration of the history and cultural practice of footbinding in China reveals the traditions that contributed to and surrounded its thousand-year enforcement, as well as its related literature, music, contests, and rewards.
  foot in chinese language: The China Medical Journal , 1910
  foot in chinese language: Prosodic Phonology of the Fuzhou Dialect Shuxiang You, 2020-03-31 Prosodic Phonology of the Fuzhou Dialect: Domains and Rule Application is the first attempt to conduct a comprehensive analysis of the Fuzhou phonological system from the perspective of prosodic phonology. It addresses the following issues: What prosodic constituents exist in the Fuzhou dialect and what kinds of roles they play in the Fuzhou phonological system; how to define the domain formation of these prosodic constituents in the Fuzhou dialect; what kinds of Fuzhou phonological phenomena make crucial reference to these prosodic constituents as the domain of application; and what implications does the study of the Fuzhou phonological system have for the prosodic phonology theory. This book is a valuable text for students and scholars in the field of Chinese dialectology, Min dialects, prosodic phonology, and phonology-morphosyntax interface.
  foot in chinese language: The Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions Janet Horowitz Murray, Myra Stark, 2016-12-19 The Englishwoman’s Review, which published from 1866 to 1910, participated in and recorded a great change in the range of possibilities open to women. The ideal of the magazine was the idea of the emerging emancipated middle-class woman: economic independence from men, choice of occupation, participation in the male enterprises of commerce and government, access to higher education, admittance to the male professions, particularly medicine, and, of course, the power of suffrage equal to that of men. First published in 1984, this thirtieth volume contains issues from 1898. With an informative introduction by Janet Horowitz Murray and Myra Stark, and an index compiled by Anna Clark, this set is an invaluable resource to those studying nineteenth and early twentieth-century feminism and the women’s movement in Britain.
  foot in chinese language: Granite State Monthly , 1899
  foot in chinese language: The Magazine of the Wesleyan Methodist Church , 1919
  foot in chinese language: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Lexical Blending Vincent Renner, François Maniez, Pierre Arnaud, 2012-12-19 The volume brings together a well-selected collection of twelve articles providing a comprehensive and very informative summary of contemporary work on lexical blending. It combines theoretically informed descriptions of a variety of languages and a number of contributions with a theoretically original focus. It is the first book of its kind on the subject, and because of its cross-disciplinary nature, it is of high relevance not only to word-formation scholars and students, but also to a wide readership within the linguistics community.
Why is a cross † used as footnote marker for people?
Sep 20, 2015 · The dagger, which sometimes looks like a cross, has long been used to as a foot- or sidenote. Here's an example from 1582, though the practice is much older than this: Here's …

biblatex footcite and footnote - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
In a document, I am using \\usepackage[style=mla,babel=hyphen,backend=biber]{biblatex} together with the \\footcite command, and everything is perfect. There is a difficulty when I …

Using \\footnote in a figure's \\caption - LaTeX Stack Exchange
Feb 3, 2011 · \caption{Caption\footnotemark.} \footnotetext{Foot notes} \end{minipage} \end{figure} This was the only way I was able to have image and footnote on the same page, …

\ifoot and \ofoot overlap: how to reduce available hspace?
Aug 8, 2018 · I can find no option to set the line width in the footer (nor the alignment). \documentclass[footheight=27.2pt]{scrartcl} \usepackage{scrlayer-scrpage} …

Change the contents of footline in a beamer presentation
Nov 17, 2012 · For my presentation, I am using Madrid theme; however, I'd like to change the contents of the footline. Currently, the footline shows, "short author" in the left, "short title" in …

Typesetting with Inch Symbols and Sizes in Inches - TeX
Personally, I don't think it's appropriate to use the mathmode commands \prime and \prime\prime (raised to superscript height, of course) to denote the length units foot and inch. Rather, these …

Configuring footnote position and spacing - TeX - TeX - LaTeX …
To "introduce some additional space in between one foot note and the next one, and between the first footnote and the line that separates it from the regular text" you can add the following line …

How I can typeset a footer on only one page? - TeX - TeX
Jan 5, 2015 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for …

beamer - How to add frame number to footline - TeX - TeX
Dec 30, 2020 · You'll have to manually set the page number in head/foot template using something like \setbeamertemplate{page number in head/foot}[totalframenumber] This prints …

Add notes under the table - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
I'm using the latex package apa6e because the apa package isn't using APA style version 6 yet.. Now I'm trying to add a table with notes right underneath it, like in this table for instance:

Why is a cross † used as footnote marker for people?
Sep 20, 2015 · The dagger, which sometimes looks like a cross, has long been used to as a foot- or sidenote. …

biblatex footcite and footnote - TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange
In a document, I am using \\usepackage[style=mla,babel=hyphen,backend=biber]{biblatex} together with the \\footcite command, …

Using \\footnote in a figure's \\caption - LaTeX Stack Exch…
Feb 3, 2011 · \caption{Caption\footnotemark.} \footnotetext{Foot notes} …

\ifoot and \ofoot overlap: how to reduce available hspace?
Aug 8, 2018 · I can find no option to set the line width in the footer (nor the alignment). …

Change the contents of footline in a beamer presentation
Nov 17, 2012 · For my presentation, I am using Madrid theme; however, I'd like to change the contents of the footline. …