Results 301 to 310 of about 6,273,592 (335)
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Teaching Chinese through Chinese Literature
The Modern Language Journal, 1976WITH THE SLOW but steady growth of Chinese language programs in the United States,1 courses in Chinese literature are now being gradually introduced into the curricula of American institutions of higher learning and even of high schools.2 As far as is known, many literature courses, unfortunately, have been taught purely as language courses, as little ...
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Chinese Bodies, Chinese Futures
Representations, 2007Why did the coolie's body speak so forcefully to nineteenth-century America of its future? And how did that body's loquacious, obscene ventriloquism shape the imaginary scaffolding of America's utopias, its science fictions? This essay answers those questions by reading Arthur Vinton's Looking Further Backward (1890), one of the first American novels ...
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Chinese Broccoli / Chinese Kale
2017Chinese broccoli, also known as Chinese kale, kai-lan, flowering kale, or gai-lan, is a leafy vegetable, featuring thick, flat, glossy bluish-green leaves with thick stems and a small number of tiny flower curds similar to those of broccoli. The potential health benefits of gai-lan broccoli include protection against cancer, cardiovascular benefits ...
M.K. Rana, P. Karthik Reddy
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Teaching Chinese, Teaching in Chinese, and Teaching the Chinese
Language Policy, 2007This article examines specific issues encountered in various areas of Chinese teaching in Australia. These issues are linked to the spheres of language planning as acquisition and as recovery and language planning as retention (Lo Bianco, 10.1007/s10993-006-9042-3).
Guo-Qiang Liu, Joseph Lo Bianco
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Geriatric Nursing, 1999
Providing culturally appropriate care to Chinese people in the United States can be greatly facilitated by understanding some of the values and practices commonly associated with the Chinese, more specifically, the Chinese elderly who may hold more traditional views.
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Providing culturally appropriate care to Chinese people in the United States can be greatly facilitated by understanding some of the values and practices commonly associated with the Chinese, more specifically, the Chinese elderly who may hold more traditional views.
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2019
Following decades of disorientating economic, social and societal changes, the Chinese self-help market flourishes. These self-help sources contain many popular sayings that represent wisdoms of life strongly rooted in Daoist and Confucian cosmology and ethics, such as constant change and cyclic thinking, and moral self-cultivation.
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Following decades of disorientating economic, social and societal changes, the Chinese self-help market flourishes. These self-help sources contain many popular sayings that represent wisdoms of life strongly rooted in Daoist and Confucian cosmology and ethics, such as constant change and cyclic thinking, and moral self-cultivation.
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What is Chinese about Chinese psychology? Who are the Chinese in Chinese psychology?
2012Abstract The two-pronged objectives of this article are firstly to engage Chinese psychology researchers in a critical examination of the assumptions about Chineseness in their enquiry, and secondly to suggest an expansion of the research agenda for Chinese psychology to include the psychology of Chinese identity.
Ying-yi Hong +2 more
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The ‘Chineseness’ vs. ‘Non-Chineseness’ of Chinese Translation Theory
The Translator, 2009AbstractSince the early 1980s, when China began to witness an influx of foreign, mainly Western, translation theories as a result of its opening up to the outside world, a number of Chinese scholars have argued that the importation of these theories has been excessive, that the Chinese have always had their own tradition of studying translation, and ...
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