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单词 Ch'u
释义

Ch'u

See also: Appendix:Variations of "chu"

English

Etymology

From Mandarin (Chǔ), Wade–Giles romanization: Chʻu³.[1]

Proper noun

Ch'u

  1. Alternative form of Chu
    • 1972, Chang Kwang-chih, Major Aspects of Ch'u Archaeology (Early Chinese Art and Its Possible Influence in the Pacific Basin), volume 1, New York: Intercultural Arts Press, page 5:
      The archaeology of the Ch'u has no traditional status or boundary unlike such rigorously defined fields as the archaeology of the Shang, the Minoans, and even the Mayas. Scholars of early China are familiar with a State of Ch'u described in the Shih-chi 史記 (ch. 40) that emerged after a legendary ancestry during the reign of Ch'eng Wang 成王 of the Chou toward the end of the second millennium B. C. somewhere in central China. It grew in size and stature during the late Western Chou period, established a capital and power centre near Chiang-ling 江陵 on the Yangtze in modern Hupei in 689, expanded its rule to a vast area from the upper Huai-ho 淮河 to south of Lake Tung-t'ing 洞庭湖, and was finally subjugated by Ch'in in 223 B. C.
    • 1974, Watson, William, The Chinese Exhibition, Times Newspapers, →ISBN, OCLC 53654792, OL 20026723M, page 93:
      This style flourished especially in the southern Ch'u kingdom, from whose noble tombs at Ch'angsha in Hunan and Chiang-ling in Hupei come some of the finest representative pieces.
    • 1980, KAI-YU HSU, WEN I-TO, Twayne Publishers, →ISBN, page 21:
      Many of these village activities, especially those related to myths and legends, have retained a strong local color in that their style and features have been continued in the tradition of the ancient state of Ch'u (3rd c. B.C.), only the names of most of the ancient characters involved have been replaced by more recent local heroes and heroines.
    • 1982, Lawton, Thomas, Chinese Art of the Warring States Period, Smithsonian Institution, →ISBN, LCCN 82-600184, OCLC 13520365, OL 8390737M, page 24:
      More recently, a Chʻu tomb at Hsi-chʻuan, Honan Province, dated to the Spring and Autumn period, has yielded several bronze vessels with decoration that suggests to the authors of the archaeological report that they might have been cast by the lost-wax method (see WW, no. 10 [1980]: 21-26, especially p. 23, pls. 1-2).
    • 1987, John P. O'Neill, editor, Ancient Chinese Art: The Ernest Erickson Collection in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, page 45:
      In this example, the bird is decorated with comma-like projections, an incised pattern of scales, and S-shaped spirals. In addition to similar pieces identified by Karlbeck as coming from Shou-hsien (see especially pl. 12:1-5), a related piece has been excavated from a Ch'u tomb of mid-Warring States date located near O-ch'eng, Hupeh (se K'ao ku 1978/4, pl. 8:5).
    • 1998, Chris Peers, Warlords of China 700 BC to AD 1662, Arms and Armour Press, →ISBN, OCLC 491672813, page 85, column 1:
      The intention was for three Han armies - under Liu Pang, Han Hsin and P’eng Yueh - to link up at Ku-ling on the border with Ch’u.

Translations

References

  1. Chu, Wade-Giles romanization Ch’u, in Encyclopædia Britannica

Anagrams

  • UHC, cuh, huc
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