Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results Year 7 Boys 100M Breaststroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 SONG ADAMS Jono 01:53.75 2 QING DUANGTHIP Wee 02:01.75 3 MING YU Nicolas 02:01.78 4 MING CHALABI Enzo 02:05.09 5 MING MACFARLANE Ian 02:05.12 6 SONG KONG Adrian 02:06.87 7 YUAN GREEN Oscar 02:10.75 8 HAN THOMAS Oliver 02:11.86 9 TANG HENDERSON Rowan 02:13.19 10 TANG WILLIAMS Spike 02:13.59 11 MING ELLUL Joseph 02:17.54 12 HAN NEUHAUS Noah 02:19.97 13 YUAN MOLYNEUX Lukas 02:26.84 14 TANG ASWANI Monish 02:34.00 15 TANG CROCI Carlo 02:53.12 16 TANG DESAI Sumer 03:11.13 Year 7 Boys 100M Freestyle Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN GUILLOT Matisse 01:20.37 2 TANG LEE Julian 01:21.85 3 YUAN SNELGROVE Oliver 01:31.50 4 QING CAMPBELL Richard 01:32.12 5 SONG SHEWARD Oscar 01:33.91 6 SONG SWAN Oengus 01:35.53 7 YUAN CHUNG Ethan 01:37.56 8 SONG DUGGAN REDFERN Alex 01:41.25 9 QING LIU Jason 01:41.59 10 YUAN MOLYNEUX Lukas 01:46.03 11 YUAN FRAIN Brendan 01:49.53 12 HAN RAPPEL Owen 01:50.09 13 MING SUEN Joseph 01:51.19 14 HAN BOTELHO Nathan 01:51.31 15 SONG LEUNG Benjamin 01:51.93 16 QING CHAN Justin 01:52.28 17 QING SMULDERS Floris 01:56.56 18 HAN NG Nick 02:03.72 19 SONG CLAYTON Arthur 02:03.88 20 HAN NEUHAUS Noah 02:19.22 21 YUAN RIGDEN GREEN Noah 02:29.22 22 QING HAYMAN Joshua 02:38.53 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results Year 7 Boys 50M Backstroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 MING YU Nicolas 00:40.06 2 HAN RAPPEL Owen 00:56.04 3 SONG DUGGAN REDFERN Alex 00:59.03 4 SONG D'CUNHA Neil 01:00.22 5 TANG BALLANTYNE Ewan 01:00.37 6 QING SMULDERS Floris 01:04.38 7 TANG WILLIAMS Spike 01:07.56 8 YUAN PASHA Namir 01:14.25 9 SONG THOMSON Luke 01:15.44 10 SONG LANGSTON Eddie 01:15.53 11 MING RAJESH Anirudh 01:20.37 12 HAN REED Ithan 01:24.12 13 SONG LI James 01:24.47 14 QING DA GRACA Jerry 01:36.08 15 SONG LAU Ronald 02:03.32 Year 7 Boys 50M Butterfly Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN GUILLOT Matisse 00:41.00 2 MING YU Nicolas 00:45.91 3 QING CAMPBELL Richard 00:48.10 4 TANG LEE Julian 00:49.28 5 YUAN SNELGROVE Oliver 00:52.75 6 QING LIU Jason 00:53.60 7 QING CHAU Ethan 00:54.44 8 SONG SWAN Oengus 00:57.72 9 YUAN GREEN Oscar 00:58.32 10 MING MACFARLANE Ian 01:11.53 Year 7 Boys 50M Freestyle Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN CHEUNG Marco 00:36.22 2 QING CAMPBELL Richard 00:39.13 3 SONG SHEWARD Oscar 00:40.87 4 YUAN SNELGROVE Oliver 00:40.91 5 SONG ADAMS Jono 00:41.13 6 MING SUEN Joseph 00:42.25 7 QING CHAU Ethan 00:43.56 8 YUAN WALTON Samuel 00:44.09 9 SONG POWELL Joshua 00:44.25 10 MING CHEUNG O Hon Oscar 00:44.60 11 YUAN FRAIN Brendan 00:44.97 12 SONG LACY Kyran 00:45.81 13 YUAN GREEN Oscar 00:45.84 14 QING LIU Jason 00:46.03 15 YUAN MOLYNEUX Lukas 00:46.44 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results 16 SONG HEDLEY Dominic 00:46.91 17 QING CHAN Justin 00:47.31 18 TANG HENDERSON Rowan 00:49.25 19 TANG LEE Jeongmin 00:49.25 20 TANG GLOVER Jamie 00:49.40 21 TANG ASWANI Monish 00:50.00 22 YUAN POON Ethan 00:52.65 23 MING DARTON James 00:52.72 24 MING MUOKA Duncan 00:52.78 25 TANG MA Matthew 00:53.03 26 TANG BALLANTYNE Ewan 00:55.44 27 SONG CLAYTON Arthur 00:56.06 28 HAN BENNELL Riley 00:56.25 29 HAN CHILDS Kris 00:56.35 30 SONG KONG Adrian 00:56.98 31 QING DA GRACA Jerry 00:57.34 32 QING SINIGAGLIA Alessandro 00:59.41 33 MING KHEMANEY Krish 00:59.44 34 SONG LI James 01:00.25 35 HAN NEUHAUS Noah 01:00.72 36 YUAN LIZARES Ryan 01:01.09 37 MING CHEUNG Matthew 01:01.18 38 SONG D'CUNHA Neil 01:02.06 39 YUAN DALAL Dhruv 01:02.06 40 TANG CROCI Carlo 01:02.28 41 YUAN MANGLANI Manav 01:02.72 42 QING CHEUNG O Wang Marcus 01:04.66 43 SONG LEUNG Benjamin 01:06.34 44 QING KANG Chan Woo 01:08.16 45 YUAN RIGDEN GREEN Noah 01:08.19 46 YUAN PASHA Namir 01:08.94 47 HAN REKHANI Laveen 01:10.85 48 SONG LANGSTON Eddie 01:11.16 49 MING CHOI Justin 01:12.59 50 QING LOMDARIDZE Tommy 01:14.31 51 SONG THOMSON Luke 01:14.68 52 MING SINGSON Colin Mikhail 01:15.03 53 MING ENGINEER Rayan 01:17.47 54 TANG OSBORNE Alex 01:19.07 55 QING KOBAYASHI Miles 01:22.53 56 TANG SHARMA Tushar 01:31.75 57 HAN TOH Patrick 01:38.63 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results Year 7 Boys 50M Breaststroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN BOTELHO Nathan 00:50.31 2 TANG LEE Jeongmin 00:56.84 3 QING DUANGTHIP Wee 00:57.91 4 YUAN CHUNG Ethan 00:58.66 5 YUAN WALTON Samuel 00:59.00 6 SONG ADAMS Jono 00:59.06 7 HAN CHEUNG Marco 00:59.29 8 MING CHALABI Enzo 01:00.00 9 QING KANG Chan Woo 01:00.66 10 HAN RAO Krish 01:01.08 11 TANG HENDERSON Rowan 01:02.19 12 SONG HAN Jeffery 01:05.68 13 TANG CHUI Arcas 01:05.91 14 TANG MA Matthew 01:07.00 15 SONG POWELL Joshua 01:07.00 16 SONG HEDLEY Dominic 01:08.00 17 YUAN POON Ethan 01:10.12 18 TANG LEUNG Benedict 01:10.28 19 SONG KONG Adrian 01:10.81 20 YUAN LAI Justin 01:11.16 21 QING WONG Wai Yuk 01:11.59 22 YUAN LEE Ryan Kit See 01:12.83 23 MING ELLUL Joseph 01:13.25 24 YUAN LIZARES Ryan 01:13.63 25 MING CHOI Justin 01:14.00 26 MING ENGINEER Rayan 01:14.00 27 TANG DESAI Sumer 01:18.00 28 YUAN HULAC Milan 01:18.22 29 HAN TOH Patrick 01:18.65 30 YUAN MANGLANI Manav 01:20.18 31 YUAN DALAL Dhruv 01:21.65 32 MING SINGSON Colin Mikhail 01:21.90 33 HAN THOMAS Oliver 01:27.00 34 HAN LEUNG Cayden 01:27.41 35 YUAN HSU Kevin 01:28.18 36 QING TOH Sean 01:29.06 37 TANG CHAN Andrew 01:31.34 38 YUAN PASHA Namir 01:34.38 39 HAN WONG Darius 01:43.44 40 TANG SHARMA Tushar 02:04.00 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results Year 7 Girls 100M Breaststroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 YUAN CHAN Teagan 01:56.00 2 QING LAMB Jane 01:58.63 3 MING LAM Isabelle 02:05.12 4 MING LEE Bridget 02:11.82 5 SONG HAY Isabel 02:13.26 6 TANG WACKER Jessica 02:18.90 7 SONG NG Sophie 02:28.62 8 HAN GREGORY Imogen 02:29.00 9 HAN HAU Jasmine 02:31.53 10 QING TRAN Alicia 02:38.35 Year 7 Girls 100M Freestyle Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN DE CHAZAL Emilie 01:17.62 2 SONG MCMAHON Greta 01:20.34 3 HAN MELLOR Isabel 01:32.00 4 HAN LEE Claire 01:42.18 5 HAN SHARPLESS Kala Jade 01:42.56 6 MING BROWN Ella 01:44.34 7 MING MO Tania 01:53.37 8 HAN TAN Natalie 02:01.09 9 QING JEFFERY Sophia 02:01.23 10 HAN LEE Kerstin 02:06.75 11 QING BRAIN Keira 02:08.25 12 HAN MINGLANI Rhea 02:10.28 13 QING INNERHOFER Tamina 02:10.49 14 SONG NEVREKAR Ambika 02:15.53 15 TANG VIRMANI Divija 02:24.53 Year 7 Girls 50M Backstroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 HAN DE CHAZAL Emilie 00:44.53 2 TANG LEW Kate 00:49.53 3 SONG WONG Constance 00:49.69 4 QING JEFFERY Sophia 00:49.81 5 TANG KIM Kyu 00:52.65 6 YUAN CHAN Teagan 00:54.13 7 QING RICHARDSON Lola 00:55.25 8 MING SAHA Tanisha 01:01.68 9 HAN HUGHES Poppy 01:02.38 10 SONG JOSHI Aaryaa 01:04.78 11 YUAN ZHOU Michelle 01:04.97 12 MING KIM Audrey 01:07.19 13 YUAN EYUNNI Gayathri 01:08.19 14 MING HUNG Felicia 01:11.53 15 YUAN NG Samantha 01:22.91 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results 16 TANG VASNANI Saira 01:24.34 Year 7 Girls 50M Butterfly Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 SONG MCMAHON Greta 00:42.97 2 HAN MELLOR Isabel 00:46.53 3 HAN DE CHAZAL Emilie 00:48.72 4 TANG LEW Kate 00:51.59 5 QING JEFFERY Sophia 00:56.46 6 QING RICHARDSON Lola 00:57.47 7 YUAN HALL Malu 01:02.72 8 YUAN CHAN Teagan 01:04.00 9 MING SAHA Tanisha 01:07.62 10 MING HULAC Marla 01:09.65 Year 7 Girls 50M Freestyle Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 MING HULAC Marla 00:43.06 2 QING TRAN Alicia 00:44.32 3 TANG SCOTT Maddie 00:45.31 4 SONG WONG Constance 00:45.81 5 MING BROWN Ella 00:46.32 6 HAN DAVIS Ruby 00:47.22 7 HAN SHARPLESS Kala Jade 00:47.41 8 TANG KIM Kyu 00:47.47 9 MING MO Tania 00:48.35 10 YUAN SIM Ning Shuen 00:49.62 11 SONG NG Sophie 00:50.26 12 TANG ALI Jasmine 00:51.62 13 SONG ROSCOE Isobella 00:51.68 14 MING HUNG Felicia 00:52.53 15 TANG GALBRAITH Nikki 00:52.69 16 SONG MARK Parisa 00:52.89 17 HAN MINGLANI Rhea 00:52.93 18 HAN TAN Natalie 00:53.06 19 QING BRAIN Keira 00:53.24 20 YUAN HALL Malu 00:53.68 21 YUAN GIMENO PARERA Gal.la 00:53.69 22 TANG DUNCAN Serena 00:53.93 23 MING HEARD Sophia 00:54.09 24 SONG YEUNG Yannis 00:55.31 25 QING INNERHOFER Tamina 00:56.13 26 SONG DASWANEY Nishtha 00:56.25 27 HAN LEE Claire 00:56.97 28 HAN HUGHES Poppy 00:57.53 29 MING MAHBUBANI Misha 00:57.53 30 YUAN ZHOU Michelle 00:57.63 31 YUAN JOHNS Amy 00:57.94 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results 32 YUAN SHAH Aashi 00:58.25 33 SONG HAY Isabel 00:59.56 34 YUAN STENFORT Julia 00:59.72 35 TANG WACKER Jessica 00:59.79 36 SONG ALTMEYER Aemilia 01:01.40 37 YUAN LEE Hannah 01:03.53 38 TANG DESIR Ciarra 01:03.72 39 YUAN EYUNNI Gayathri 01:04.47 40 SONG PHEASANT Ella 01:04.81 41 MING HO Eugenie 01:04.93 42 QING MOBBS Emily 01:05.32 43 SONG SMITH Alicia 01:05.34 44 MING KUMAR Tarushi 01:05.50 45 QING IP Zoe 01:05.91 46 QING JAIN Tanisha 01:09.38 47 TANG VASNANI Saira 01:30.84 48 SONG SHEARMAN Fionnuala 01:50.00 Year 7 Girls 50M Breaststroke Place Dynasty Surname First Name Time 1 MING HO Eugenie 00:52.50 2 QING LAMB Jane 00:56.31 3 YUAN GIMENO PARERA Gal.la 00:56.62 4 HAN HUGHES Poppy 00:58.00 5 MING MAHBUBANI Misha 00:58.72 6 TANG ALI Jasmine 00:59.90 7 MING HEARD Sophia 01:00.63 8 TANG KIM Kyu 01:00.97 9 TANG LEW Kate 01:02.25 10 YUAN SHAH Aashi 01:02.55 11 YUAN BHAVNANI Kamakshi 01:04.28 12 TANG SCOTT Maddie 01:05.10 13 HAN GREGORY Imogen 01:05.16 14 HAN DAVIS Ruby 01:05.25 15 HAN LEE Tiana Seton 01:05.47 16 QING SINGH Pratyaksha 01:05.69 17 QING MOBBS Emily 01:07.13 18 HAN HAU Jasmine 01:07.58 19 MING KUMAR Tarushi 01:08.34 20 SONG SMITH Alicia 01:11.16 21 SONG YEUNG Yannis 01:12.41 22 SONG SHEARMAN Fionnuala 01:12.53 23 SONG NEVREKAR Ambika 01:14.00 24 YUAN STENFORT Julia 01:14.59 25 YUAN JOHNS Amy 01:14.84 26 SONG ROSCOE Isobella 01:17.70 27 YUAN CHAN Teagan 01:18.10 28 SONG DASWANEY Nishtha 01:20.87 Year 7 Inter-Dynasty Swim Heat Results 29 SONG MARK Parisa 01:22.94 30 SONG ALTMEYER Aemilia 01:25.22 31 SONG PHEASANT Ella 01:25.47 32 TANG VIRMANI Divija 01:25.97 33 TANG DESIR Ciarra 01:26.63 34 TANG SINGH Kiara 01:29.09 35 QING JAIN Tanisha 01:30.06 36 TANG DUNCAN Serena 01:59.57.
Recommended publications
  • Anhong Guo's Curriculum Vitae
    Anhong Guo Curriculum Vitæ Bob and Betty Beyster Building 3741 https://guoanhong.com 2260 Hayward Street +1 (678) 899-3981 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA [email protected] Academic Positions 01/2021 – University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Assistant Professor, Computer Science and Engineering (EECS); School of Information (by courtesy) 09/2020 – Carnegie Mellon University 12/2020 Postdoctoral Fellow, Human-Computer Interaction Institute, School of Computer Science Education 08/2014 – Carnegie Mellon University 08/2020 Ph.D. in Human-Computer Interaction M.S. in Human-Computer Interaction Human-Computer Interaction Institute, School of Computer Science Thesis: Human-AI Systems for Visual Information Access Advisor: Jeffrey P. Bigham; Committee: Chris Harrison, Jodi Forlizzi, and Meredith Ringel Morris 08/2012 – Georgia Institute of Technology 05/2014 M.S. in Human-Computer Interaction School of Interactive Computing Thesis: BeyondTouch: Extending the Input Language with Built-in Sensors on Commodity Smartphones Advisor: Gregory Abowd 09/2008 – Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications (BUPT) 06/2012 B.Eng. in Electronic Information Engineering School of Information and Communication Engineering Awards and Honors 2021 CHI 2021 Best Paper Honorable Mention [C.23] 2021 Forbes’ Top 30 Scientists Under 30 (‘30 Under 30’) 2020 ASSETS 2020 Best Paper Nominee [C.21] 2019 ASSETS 2019 Best Artifact Award [C.17] 2018 CMU Swartz Innovation Fellowship 2018 McGinnis Venture Capital Award 2017 Snap Inc. Research Fellowship 2017 W4A 2017 Paciello Group Accessibility Challenge Delegates Award [A.5] 2016 Qualcomm Innovation Fellowship Finalist 2016 MobileHCI 2016 Best Paper Honorable Mention [C.8] 2014 ISWC 2014 Best Paper Honorable Mention [C.1] Peer-Reviewed Conference and Journal Papers Anhong Guo — curriculum vitæ, page 1 [C.24] Solon Barocas, Anhong Guo, Ece Kamar, Jacquelyn Krones, Meredith Ringel Morris, Jennifer Wortman Vaughan, Duncan Wadsworth, Hanna Wallach.
    [Show full text]
  • Assimilation of GOES-R Geostationary Lightning Mapper Flash Extent Density Data in GSI Enkf for the Analysis and Short-Term Forecast of a Mesoscale Convective System
    MAY 2020 K O N G E T A L . 2111 Assimilation of GOES-R Geostationary Lightning Mapper Flash Extent Density Data in GSI EnKF for the Analysis and Short-Term Forecast of a Mesoscale Convective System RONG KONG Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma Downloaded from http://journals.ametsoc.org/mwr/article-pdf/148/5/2111/4928019/mwrd190192.pdf by NOAA Central Library user on 11 August 2020 MING XUE Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms, and School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma ALEXANDRE O. FIERRO Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, University of Oklahoma, and NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma YOUNGSUN JUNG AND CHENGSI LIU Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma EDWARD R. MANSELL AND DONALD R. MACGORMAN NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma (Manuscript received 11 June 2019, in final form 9 March 2020) ABSTRACT The recently launched Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite ‘‘R-series’’ (GOES-R) satellites carry the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) that measures from space the total lightning rate in convective storms at high spatial and temporal frequencies. This study assimilates, for the first time, real GLM total lightning data in an ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) framework. The lightning flash extent density (FED) products at 10-km pixel resolution are assimilated. The capabilities to assimilate GLM FED data are first implemented into the GSI-based EnKF data assimilation (DA) system and tested with a mesoscale convective system (MCS). FED observation operators based on graupel mass or graupel volume are used.
    [Show full text]
  • English Versions of Chinese Authors' Names in Biomedical Journals
    Dialogue English Versions of Chinese Authors’ Names in Biomedical Journals: Observations and Recommendations The English language is widely used inter- In English transliteration, two-syllable Forms of Chinese Authors’ Names nationally for academic purposes. Most of given names sometimes are spelled as two in Biomedical Journals the world’s leading life-science journals are words (Jian Hua), sometimes as one word We recently reviewed forms of Chinese published in English. A growing number (Jianhua), and sometimes hyphenated authors’ names accompanying English- of Chinese biomedical journals publish (Jian-Hua). language articles or abstracts in various abstracts or full papers in this language. Occasionally Chinese surnames are Chinese and Western biomedical journals. We have studied how Chinese authors’ two syllables (for example, Ou-Yang, Mu- We found considerable inconsistency even names are presented in English in bio- Rong, Si-Ma, and Si-Tu). Editors who are within the same journal or issue. The forms medical journals. There is considerable relatively unfamiliar with Chinese names were in the following categories: inconsistency. This inconsistency causes may mistake these compound surnames for • Surname in all capital letters followed by confusion, for example, in distinguishing given names. hyphenated or closed-up given name, for surnames from given names and thus cit- China has 56 ethnic groups. Names example, ing names properly in reference lists. of minority group members can differ KE Zhi-Yong (Chinese Journal of In the current article we begin by pre- considerably from those of Hans, who Contemporary Pediatrics) senting as background some features of constitute most of the Chinese population. GUO Liang-Qian (Chinese Chinese names.
    [Show full text]
  • The Funeral of Mr. Wang Examines Social Change in Urbanizing China Through the Lens of Funerals, the Funerary Industry, and Practices of Memorialization
    KIPNIS ANTHROPOLOGY | ASIAN STUDIES In rural China funerals are conducted locally, on village land by village elders. But in urban areas, people have neither land for burials nor elder relatives to conduct funerals. Chinese urbanization, which has increased drastically in recent decades, involves the creation of cemeteries, state-run funeral homes, WANG OF MR. FUNERAL THE and small private funerary businesses. The Funeral of Mr. Wang examines social change in urbanizing China through the lens of funerals, the funerary industry, and practices of memorialization. It analyzes changes in family life, patterns of urban sociality, transformations in economic relations, the politics of memorialization, and the echoes of these changes in beliefs about the dead and ghosts. “This book is highly original and addresses a topic of central importance to understanding Chinese family life and the limits of a party-state’s regulatory THE FUNERAL OF MR. WANG power over the society and individual citizens. Original and systematic field- work is expertly used to illustrate core arguments. To my knowledge there is no competing ethnography.” LIFE, DEATH, AND GHOSTS IN URBANIZING CHINA Deborah Davis, Professor Emerita of Sociology, Yale University ANDREW B. KIPNIS “The Funeral of Mr. Wang is a vivid portrait of how the transition from life to death is negotiated in the midst of a rapidly transforming urban Chinese so- ciety. Showing how death in contemporary China generates interconnected processes of cultural recombination among family members, funeral service providers, bureaucratic regulators, strangers, and ghosts, this book will be crit- ical reading for all students of China and of death in contemporary societies.” David A.
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief Analysis of Chinese Compound Features”, Vol: 1 Issue: 3 Pp: 311-315 Keywords: Chinese Compound, Head Morphologies, Semantic Classification of Compound Yields
    311 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES (ONLINE) - ISSN: 2717-7130 Vol:1, Issue: 3 pp: 311-315 JEL Codes: Z1,Z13,Z19 LUO Y. and MA J. (2020). “A Brief Analysis of Chinese Compound Features”, Vol: 1 Issue: 3 pp: 311-315 Keywords: Chinese compound, head morphologies, semantic classification of compound yields. Article Type Research Article A Brief Analysis of Chinese Compound Features Arrived Date Accepted Date Published Date 17.07.2020 21.07.2020 31.07.2020 Jacky (Yibu Luo)*, Martin (Junjie Ma)† ABSTRACT As Booij (2016) stated, morphology refers to the study of the “internal structure of words” and the rules by which words are formed (p. 7) 0. As a significant branch of morphology, English speakers are accustomed to composing a compound phrase with several single lexemes or free morphemes. As a ubiquitous linguistic phenomenon, compounds have become an indispensable component of language lexeme formation. Compounds, by definition, are “words that are composed of two (or more) bases, roots, or stems” (Lieber, 2010, p. 43). In Mandarin Chinese, almost all words can be considered as compounds. Xing (2006) remarked that approximately 80% of Chinese words are in fact compound words. There are some peripheral morphological phenomena in Germanic language such as English, which is just as prevalent in Chinese as the Sino-Tibetan language. According to the previous studies, the most obvious characteristics of Chinese compounds exhibit four common head morphologies: right-headed, left-headed, two-headed and headedness in “metacompounding”. The aim of the paper is to highlight the distinct feature of Chinese in morphology through introducing the linguistic concepts with regard to compound.
    [Show full text]
  • Names of Chinese People in Singapore
    101 Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 7.1 (2011): 101-133 DOI: 10.2478/v10016-011-0005-6 Lee Cher Leng Department of Chinese Studies, National University of Singapore ETHNOGRAPHY OF SINGAPORE CHINESE NAMES: RACE, RELIGION, AND REPRESENTATION Abstract Singapore Chinese is part of the Chinese Diaspora.This research shows how Singapore Chinese names reflect the Chinese naming tradition of surnames and generation names, as well as Straits Chinese influence. The names also reflect the beliefs and religion of Singapore Chinese. More significantly, a change of identity and representation is reflected in the names of earlier settlers and Singapore Chinese today. This paper aims to show the general naming traditions of Chinese in Singapore as well as a change in ideology and trends due to globalization. Keywords Singapore, Chinese, names, identity, beliefs, globalization. 1. Introduction When parents choose a name for a child, the name necessarily reflects their thoughts and aspirations with regards to the child. These thoughts and aspirations are shaped by the historical, social, cultural or spiritual setting of the time and place they are living in whether or not they are aware of them. Thus, the study of names is an important window through which one could view how these parents prefer their children to be perceived by society at large, according to the identities, roles, values, hierarchies or expectations constructed within a social space. Goodenough explains this culturally driven context of names and naming practices: Department of Chinese Studies, National University of Singapore The Shaw Foundation Building, Block AS7, Level 5 5 Arts Link, Singapore 117570 e-mail: [email protected] 102 Lee Cher Leng Ethnography of Singapore Chinese Names: Race, Religion, and Representation Different naming and address customs necessarily select different things about the self for communication and consequent emphasis.
    [Show full text]
  • Interracial Experience Across Colonial Hong Kong and Foreign Enclaves in China from the Late 1800S to the 1980S
    Volume 14, Number 2 • Spring 2017 Erasure, Solidarity, Duplicity: Interracial Experience across Colonial Hong Kong and Foreign Enclaves in China from the late 1800s to the 1980s By Vicky Lee, Ph.D., Hong Kong Baptist University Abstract: How were Eurasians perceived and classified in Hong Kong and China during this hundred-year period? Blood admixture was only one of many ways: others included patrilineal descent, choice of family name, and socio-economic background. Family-imposed silence on one’s Eurasian background remained strong, and individual attempts to erase one’s Eurasian identity were common for survival reasons. It is no wonder that government authorities often had difficulty quantifying their Eurasian population. What experiences of erasure of Eurasianness were shared both collectively and individually? A strong sense of Eurasian solidarity was manifested in different forms, such as intermarriage and community cemeteries. Duplicity was another common element in their experience: Name-changing practices and submission to the new Japanese government during the Occupation sometimes rendered Eurasians suspect during and after wartime. Memoirs reflect the constant psychological harassment of Eurasians in patriotic Chinese schools during 1940s Peking and in Tsingdao, and Eurasians became frequent targets for criticism during the Maoist Era. Many Eurasians experienced psychological and physical torment as their very faces were evidence enough to subject them to criticism and punishments. Permalink: Citation: Lee, Vicky. “Erasure, Solidarity, Duplicity: usfca.edu/center-asia-pacific/perspectives/v14n2/Lee Interracial Experience across Colonial Hong Kong and Keywords: Foreign Enclaves in China from the late 1800s to the Chinese Eurasian, Mixed Identities, Colonial 1980s,” Asia Pacific Perspectives, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • And Iot-Based Smart Product-Service System for the Sustainability of Prefabricated Housing Construction
    A blockchain- and IoT-based smart product-service system for the sustainability of prefabricated housing construction Clyde Zhengdao Li, Zhe Chen, Fan Xue, Xiang T.R. Kong, Bing Xiao, Xulu, Lai, and Yiyu Zhao This is the peer-reviewed post-print version of the paper: Li, C. Z., Chen, Z., Xue, F., Kong, X.T.R., Xiao, B., Lai, X. & Zhao, Y. (2021). A blockchain- and IoT-based smart product-service system for the sustainability of prefabricated housing construction. Journal of Cleaner Production, Article ID 125391, In press. Doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125391 The final version of this paper is available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125391. The use of this file must follow the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License, as required by Elsevier’s policy. Abstract: Prefabricated housing construction (PHC) will be widely recognized as a contributor to consumption reduction and sustainability enhancement if inherent drawbacks (e.g., fragmented management, poor connectivity) can be addressed efficiently. The promotion of advanced information and communication technologies (ICT) has triggered the evolvement of smart product-service systems (SPSS), where a smart connected product (SCP) acts as a critical role in the interconnection of physical components and specialized services for value co-creation. Hence, it is promising to realize the positive improvement of PHC based on an SPSS approach, especially during the challenging post-COVID-19 pandemic era. We developed an intelligent platform based on service-oriented manners with practical case demonstration for interactive innovation of PHC shareholders, among which prefabricated components (PC) have been defined as the SCP in PHC, and a platform-enabled approach has also been adopted in the way of SPSS.
    [Show full text]
  • Professional Appointment Education Research
    CURRICULUM VITAE Shaohua Guo (September, 2020) Department of Asian Languages and Literatures Carleton College One North College Street, Northfield, MN 55057 [email protected] (507) 222-5957 PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENT Fall 2020-Present Associate Professor Department of Asian Languages and Literatures, Carleton College 2014-2020 Assistant Professor Department of Asian Languages and Literatures, Carleton College 2012-2014 Visiting Assistant Professor Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, Colgate University EDUCATION Ph.D., Asian Cultures and Languages The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX M.A., Comparative Literature Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China B.A., Chinese Language and Literature Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China RESEARCH INTERESTS Cultural Studies of Digital Media Chinese Literature, Film, and Culture Popular Cultures in East Asia PUBLICATIONS (all single-authored unless otherwise noted) BOOKS The Evolution of the Chinese Internet: Creative Visibility in the Digital Public. Stanford: Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2020. Jiedu Tangji kede (Introduction to Don Quixote). Co-authored with Yang Mei and Liu Yingmei. Beijing: Jinghua Press, 2001. PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES Forthcoming 2021. “You Tube, We Comment: I Am a Singer and Geopolitical Encounters of Sinophone Communities.” ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts 28(1). Forthcoming 2021. Belinda Kong, and Shaohua Guo. “Introduction to the Special Edition on Imagining Geopolitics across Media and Artforms in Asia and Beyond.” ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts 28(1). 2020. “Cinderella Stories Retold: Geopolitics of Taiwanese Idol Dramas.” Modern Chinese Literature and Culture 32(1): 73-107. 2018. “‘Occupying’ the Internet: State Media and the Reinvention of Official Culture Online.” Communication and the Public 3(1): 19-33.
    [Show full text]
  • A Comparison of the Korean and Japanese Approaches to Foreign Family Names
    15 A Comparison of the Korean and Japanese Approaches to Foreign Family Names JIN Guanglin* Abstract There are many foreign family names in Korean and Japanese genealogies. This paper is especially focused on the fact that out of approximately 280 Korean family names, roughly half are of foreign origin, and that out of those foreign family names, the majority trace their beginnings to China. In Japan, the Newly Edited Register of Family Names (新撰姓氏錄), published in 815, records that out of 1,182 aristocratic clans in the capital and its surroundings, 326 clans—approximately one-third—originated from China and Korea. Does the prevalence of foreign family names reflect migration from China to Korea, and from China and Korea to Japan? Or is it perhaps a result of Korean Sinophilia (慕華思想) and Japanese admiration for Korean and Chinese cultures? Or could there be an entirely distinct explanation? First I discuss premodern Korean and ancient Japanese foreign family names, and then I examine the formation and characteristics of these family names. Next I analyze how migration from China to Korea, as well as from China and Korea to Japan, occurred in their historical contexts. Through these studies, I derive answers to the above-mentioned questions. Key words: family names (surnames), Chinese-style family names, cultural diffusion and adoption, migration, Sinophilia in traditional Korea and Japan 1 Foreign Family Names in Premodern Korea The precise number of Korean family names varies by record. The Geography Annals of King Sejong (世宗實錄地理志, 1454), the first systematic register of Korean family names, records 265 family names, but the Survey of the Geography of Korea (東國輿地勝覽, 1486) records 277.
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to Names and Naming Practices
    March 2006 AA GGUUIIDDEE TTOO NN AAMMEESS AANNDD NNAAMMIINNGG PPRRAACCTTIICCEESS This guide has been produced by the United Kingdom to aid with difficulties that are commonly encountered with names from around the globe. Interpol believes that member countries may find this guide useful when dealing with names from unfamiliar countries or regions. Interpol is keen to provide feedback to the authors and at the same time develop this guidance further for Interpol member countries to work towards standardisation for translation, data transmission and data entry. The General Secretariat encourages all member countries to take advantage of this document and provide feedback and, if necessary, updates or corrections in order to have the most up to date and accurate document possible. A GUIDE TO NAMES AND NAMING PRACTICES 1. Names are a valuable source of information. They can indicate gender, marital status, birthplace, nationality, ethnicity, religion, and position within a family or even within a society. However, naming practices vary enormously across the globe. The aim of this guide is to identify the knowledge that can be gained from names about their holders and to help overcome difficulties that are commonly encountered with names of foreign origin. 2. The sections of the guide are governed by nationality and/or ethnicity, depending on the influencing factor upon the naming practice, such as religion, language or geography. Inevitably, this guide is not exhaustive and any feedback or suggestions for additional sections will be welcomed. How to use this guide 4. Each section offers structured guidance on the following: a. typical components of a name: e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Chinese American Surname Naming Practices Genevieve Y Leung University of Pennsylvania, USA
    names, Vol. 59 No. 4, December, 2011, 204–13 Disambiguating the Term “Chinese”: An Analysis of Chinese American Surname Naming Practices Genevieve Y Leung University of Pennsylvania, USA The term “Chinese” can refer to an ethnicity, a group of people, or lan- guage(s). This conflation makes disentanglement especially difficult, yet not disambiguating perpetuates an oversimplification of a nation, language s, peoples, and cultures. While this blanket term collapses plurality into a monolithic entity, the converse seems to hold when looking at Romanized naming practices of Chinese Americans. The alphabetic rendition of Chinese American names draws relatively clear boundaries of country of origin and general time of arrival to the United States. This paper problematizes the term “Chinese” and looks at the Chineses like Cantonese and Hoisan-wa, which have long overlooked histories in the United States and hold critical clues to disambiguating the cultural and linguistic pluralities of what many would lump together as an immutable term. These findings have implica- tions for using this naming phenomenon to raise linguistic awareness and for the teaching of Chinese American history. keywords Toishanese/Hoisan-wa, Cantonese, names, Chinese American history Introduction While present trends of US immigration show a vast spread of ethnic Chinese immigrants of various language backgrounds, most Americans and even Chinese Americans may not know that nearly all Chinese immigrants from the 1800s to 1970s spoke some variety of “Cantonese” originating in the Szeyap (!", literally: ‘Four Districts’) region. As explained by McCoy (1966), the Szeyap region is an area in Guangdong (#$) province in mainland China which consists of four districts: Taishan (%&), Kaiping ('(), Enping ()(), and Xinhui (*+).
    [Show full text]