Erratum: KE JIANG, JIN-LONG REN, JUN-FENG GUO, ZENG

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Erratum: KE JIANG, JIN-LONG REN, JUN-FENG GUO, ZENG Zootaxa 4759 (4): 600–600 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/ Erratum ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2020 Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4759.4.13 http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FD27086C-8EAA-4E10-A434-DDD273A87B8B KE JIANG, JIN-LONG REN, JUN-FENG GUO, ZENG WANG, LI DING1 & JIA-TANG LI (2020) A new species of the genus Dendrelaphis (Squamata: Colubridae) from Yunnan Province, China, with discussion of the occurrence of D. cyanochloris (Wall, 1921) in China. Zootaxa, 4743: 001–020. In the last paragraph of page 16, we lost a species, Dendrelaphis subocularis from China, and this species was also lost in the key of page 17. The correction as below: Currently, six species of the genus Dendrelaphis are known from China, including D. biloreatus from Tibet; the D. cyanochloris complex from Tibet, Hainan and Yunnan; D. hollinrakei from Hong Kong; D. cf. pictus from Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan and Yunnan; D. subocularis and D. vogeli from Yunnan. An updated diagnostic key of the six known species in China is provided below. 1a. Dorsal scale rows 13 on mid-body ........................... D. biloreatus 1b. Dorsal scale rows 15 on mid-body. ............................. .. 2 2a. A light ventrolateral stripe present and bordered by one or two black stripes on the most of the body ...................3 2b. A light ventrolateral stripe absent or not distinct, black stripes absent . ............................ 4 3a. Supralabials 7–8, subcaudals less than 110 pairs. ......................... D. subocularis 3b. Supralabials 9–10, subcaudals more than 110 pairs. ............................. 5 4a. 20–25 maxillary teeth each side, the outermost dorsal scale row the same color as ventrals, and distinctly lighter than other dorsal scales, retracted hemipenis extended to 11–18th subcaudals .......................... D. cyanochloris complex 4b. 20–21 maxillary teeth each side, the outermost dorsal scale row the same color as other dorsal scales, retracted hemipenis ex- tended to 6–7th subcaudals. ...................................................................... D. vogeli 5a. The ventrolateral black stripe present at anterior body, vertebral scale smaller than or equal to dorsal scale of the outermost row. ......................................................... D. pictus 5b. The ventrolateral black stripe absent at anterior body, vertebral scale distinctly smaller than dorsal scale of the outermost row. ...................................................... D. hollinrakei 600 Accepted by T. Nguyen: 17 Mar. 2020; published: 6 Apr. 2020 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0.
Recommended publications
  • Syllabus 1 Lín Táo 林燾 and Gêng Zhènshëng 耿振生
    CHINESE 542 Introduction to Chinese Historical Phonology Spring 2005 This course is a basic introduction at the graduate level to methods and materials in Chinese historical phonology. Reading ability in Chinese is required. It is assumed that students have taken Chinese 342, 442, or the equivalent, and are familiar with articulatory phonetics concepts and terminology, including the International Phonetic Alphabet, and with general notions of historical sound change. Topics covered include the periodization of the Chinese language; the source materials for reconstructing earlier stages of the language; traditional Chinese phonological categories and terminology; fânqiè spellings; major reconstruction systems; the use of reference materials to determine reconstructions in these systems. The focus of the course is on Middle Chinese. Class: Mondays & Fridays 3:30 - 5:20, Savery 335 Web: http://courses.washington.edu/chin532/ Instructor: Zev Handel 245 Gowen, 543-4863 [email protected] Office hours: MF 2-3pm Grading: homework exercises 30% quiz 5% comprehensive test 25% short translations 15% annotated translation 25% Readings: Readings are available on e-reserves or in the East Asian library. Items below marked with a call number are on reserve in the East Asian Library or (if the call number starts with REF) on the reference shelves. Items marked eres are on course e-reserves. Baxter, William H. 1992. A handbook of Old Chinese phonology. (Trends in linguistics: studies and monographs, 64.) Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. PL1201.B38 1992 [eres: chapters 2, 8, 9] Baxter, William H. and Laurent Sagart. 1998 . “Word formation in Old Chinese” . In New approaches to Chinese word formation: morphology, phonology and the lexicon in modern and ancient Chinese.
    [Show full text]
  • Self-Study Syllabus on China’S Domestic Politics
    Self-Study Syllabus on China’s domestic politics www.mandarinsociety.org PrefaceAbout this syllabus. syllabus aspires to guide interested non-specialists in Thisthe study of some of the most salient and important aspects of the contemporary Chinese domestic political scene. The recommended readings survey basic features of China’s political system as well as important developments in politics, ideology, and domestic policy under Xi Jinping. Some effort has been made to promote awareness of the broad array of available English language scholarship and analysis. Reflecting the authors’ belief that study of official documents remains a critical skill for the study of Chinese politics, an effort has been made as well to include some of these important sources. This syllabus is organized to build understanding in a step-by-step fashion based on one hour of reading five nights a week for four weeks. We assume at most a passing familiarity with the Chinese political system. The syllabus also provides a glossary of key terms and a list of recommended reading for books and websites for those seeking to engage in deeper study. American Mandarin Society 1 Week One: Building the Foundation The organization, ideology, and political processes of China’s governance • “Chinese Politics Has No Rules, But It May Be Good if Xi Jinping Breaks Them” Overview ,Christopher Johnson, Center for Strategic and International Studies, August 9, 2017. Mr. Johnson argues that the institutionalization of This week’s readings review some of the basic and most distinctive features of China’s Chinese politics was less than many foreign political system.
    [Show full text]
  • 中国人的姓名 王海敏 Wang Hai Min
    中国人的姓名 王海敏 Wang Hai min last name first name Haimin Wang 王海敏 Chinese People’s Names Two parts Last name First name 姚明 Yao Ming Last First name name Jackie Chan 成龙 cheng long Last First name name Bruce Lee 李小龙 li xiao long Last First name name The surname has roughly several origins as follows: 1. the creatures worshipped in remote antiquity . 龙long, 马ma, 牛niu, 羊yang, 2. ancient states’ names 赵zhao, 宋song, 秦qin, 吴wu, 周zhou 韩han,郑zheng, 陈chen 3. an ancient official titles 司马sima, 司徒situ 4. the profession. 陶tao,钱qian, 张zhang 5. the location and scene in residential places 江jiang,柳 liu 6.the rank or title of nobility 王wang,李li • Most are one-character surnames, but some are compound surname made up of two of more characters. • 3500Chinese surnames • 100 commonly used surnames • The three most common are 张zhang, 王wang and 李li What does my name mean? first name strong beautiful lively courageous pure gentle intelligent 1.A person has an infant name and an official one. 2.In the past,the given names were arranged in the order of the seniority in the family hierarchy. 3.It’s the Chinese people’s wish to give their children a name which sounds good and meaningful. Project:Search on-Line www.Mandarinintools.com/chinesename.html Find Chinese Names for yourself, your brother, sisters, mom and dad, or even your grandparents. Find meanings of these names. ----What is your name? 你叫什么名字? ni jiao shen me ming zi? ------ 我叫王海敏 wo jiao Wang Hai min ------ What is your last name? 你姓什么? ni xing shen me? (你贵姓?)ni gui xing? ------ 我姓 王,王海敏。 wo xing wang, Wang Hai min ----- What is your nationality? 你是哪国人? ni shi na guo ren? ----- I am chinese/American 我是中国人/美国人 Wo shi zhong guo ren/mei guo ren 百家 姓 bai jia xing 赵(zhào) 钱(qián) 孙(sūn) 李(lǐ) 周(zhōu) 吴(wú) 郑(zhèng) 王(wán 冯(féng) 陈(chén) 褚(chǔ) 卫(wèi) 蒋(jiǎng) 沈(shěn) 韩(hán) 杨(yáng) 朱(zhū) 秦(qín) 尤(yóu) 许(xǔ) 何(hé) 吕(lǚ) 施(shī) 张(zhāng).
    [Show full text]
  • Chiquan Guo the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Department of Marketing (956) 665-7339 Email: [email protected]
    Dr. Chiquan Guo The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Department of Marketing (956) 665-7339 Email: [email protected] Education PhD, Southern Illinois University - Carbondale, 2002. Major: Business Administration Title: Market Orientation and Customer Satisfaction: An Empirical Investigation MBA, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh, 1996. Major: Business Administration BA, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay, 1994. Major: Economics Employment History Academic - Post-Secondary Associate Professor of Marketing, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. (September 2015 - Present). Licensures and Certifications UTRGV's Sustainable Faculty Development Webinar Sessions, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Office for Sustainability. (May 2019 - Present). QM Rubric Update Sixth Edition (RU), Quality Matters (QM). (January 8, 2019 - Present). Study of Exchange: Comprehension of Local History and Culture, B3 Institure & Center for Teaching Excellence at The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. (2018 - Present). Independent Applying the QM Rubric (APPQMR), Quality Matters (QM). (December 9, 2016 - Present). Majors Fair, The University of Texas-Pan American. (September 23, 2014 - Present). Teaching Excellence, College of Business Administration at The University of Texas-Pan American. (May 2014 - Present). Majors Fair, Coordinator of Majors Fair Committee at The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. (September 24, 2013 - Present). Teaching Online Certification - Blackboard Learn, Center for Online Learning, Teaching & Technology at The University of Texas-Pan American. (April 8, 2013 - Present). Responsible Conduct of Research; Social and Behavioral Responsible Conduct of Research Course 1; 1 - Basic Course, CITI Program. (February 20, 2019 - February 19, 2023). Report Generated on September 13, 2021 Page 1 of 8 Basic/Refresher Course - Human Subjects Research; Social Behavioral Research Investigators and Key Personnel; 1 - Basic Course, CITI Program.
    [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]
  • 1 Contemporary Ethnic Identity of Muslim Descendants Along The
    1 Contemporary Ethnic Identity Of Muslim Descendants Along the Chinese Maritime Silk Route Dru C Gladney Anthropology Department University of South Carolina U.S.A At the end of five day's journey, you arrive at the noble-and handsome city of Zaitun [Quanzhoui] which has a port on the sea-coast celebrated for the resort of shipping, loaded with merchandise, that is afterwards distributed through every part of the province .... It is indeed impossible to convey an idea of the concourse of merchants and the accumulation of goods, in this which is held to be one of the largest and most commodious ports in the world. Marco Polo In February 1940, representatives from the China Muslim National Salvation society in Beijing came to the fabled maritime Silk Road city of Quanzhou, Fujian, known to Marco Polo as Zaitun, in order to interview the members of a lineage surnamed "Ding" who resided then and now in Chendai Township, Jinjiang County. In response to a question on his ethnic background, Mr. Ding Deqian answered: "We are Muslims [Huijiao reo], our ancestors were Muslims" (Zhang 1940:1). It was not until 1979, however, that these Muslims became minzu, an ethnic nationality. After attempting to convince the State for years that they belonged to the Hui nationality, they were eventually accepted. The story of the late recognition of the members of the Ding lineage in Chendai Town and the resurgence of their ethnoreligious identity as Hui and as Muslims is a fascinating reminder that there still exist remnants of the ancient connections between Quanzhou and the Western Regions, the origin points of the Silk Road.
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese Radicals (Meaning Parts);  Section 2: GCSE Vocabulary & Key Structures;  Section 3: Key Grammar Points;  Section 4: Chinese Culture;
    Pre-U Mandarin 中文 Preparation materials This booklet contains suggestions how you can prepare yourself to make a confident start in AS Chinese after your GCSEs. In this booklet you will find a Chinese vocabulary and grammar revision, which will lead to an exam at the beginning of the course in September. In order to have a great start please prepare for the test in advance and aim for high marks. Please learn or revise the following sections. The exam will be written in a similar way to each exercise. Content: Section 1: Chinese radicals (meaning parts); Section 2: GCSE Vocabulary & key structures; Section 3: Key grammar points; Section 4: Chinese culture; Section 1: Chinese radicals (meaning parts) Chinese radicals, or meaning parts, are very important for the usage of dictionary, and also can greatly facilitate the memorisation of Chinese characters. Please learn the following key Chinese radicals. You need to be able to write them from memory, and identify them in individual characters. "people" related to "street" related to "mouth" "speak" related to "female" related to "person" "cold" "water" related to "sun" "body" related to "fence" related to "hand" "hand" related to "silk" related to "silk" related to "trees" related to "feeling" related to "feeling" related to "knife" related to "knife" related to "knife" related to "fire" related to "fire" related to "road" related to "border" related to "eye" related to " feet" related to "food" related to "metal" related to "aninmals" related to "roof" related to "cave" related to "grass" related to "bamboo" indicate actions related to "strength" related to "pray" related to "clothes" related to "soil" related to "stone" related to "hill" related to "room" related to "illness" related to "room" related to "door" related to "jade" related to "money" related to "field" Exercise: Part A Write the following radicals from your memory: People_____ jade _____ animal _______ silk _____ trees ____ soil ____ Part B write down the radicals of the following characters on the lines.
    [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]
  • Some Q-Supercongruences for Truncated Basic Hypergeometric Series
    Some q-supercongruences for truncated basic hypergeometric series Victor J. W. Guo School of Mathematical Sciences Huaiyin Normal University Huaian, Jiangsu 223300 People’s Republic of China E-mail: [email protected] Jiang Zeng Universit´ede Lyon Universit´eLyon 1 Institut Camille Jordan, UMR 5208 du CNRS 43, boulevard du 11 novembre 1918 F-69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France E-mail: [email protected] Abstract For any odd prime p we obtain q-analogues of van Hamme’s and Rodriguez-Villegas’ supercongruences involving products of three bi- nomial coefficients such as p−1 2 3 2k X 2k q 2 2 2 2 2 ≡ 0 (mod [p] ) for p ≡ 3 (mod 4), k 2 (−q ; q ) (−q; q) k=0 q k 2k p−1 2 3 2 3 3k X 2k (q; q )k(q ; q )kq 2 6 6 2 ≡ 0 (mod [p] ) for p ≡ 2 (mod 3), k 3 (q ; q ) k=0 q k p−1 n−1 where [p] = 1+q+···+q and (a; q)n = (1−a)(1−aq) ··· (1−aq ). We also prove q-analogues of the Sun brothers’ generalizations of the 2010 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 11B65; Secondary 05A10, 05A30. Key words and phrases: p-adic integer, congruences, supercongruences, basic hyper- geometric series, q-binomial theorem, q-Chu-Vandermonde formula. 1 2 V. J. W. Guo and J. Zeng above supercongruences. Our proofs are elementary in nature and use the theory of basic hypergeometric series and combinatorial q- binomial identities including a new q-Clausen-type summation for- mula. 1 Introduction We shall follow the standard q-notations from [4].
    [Show full text]
  • The Revival of Guoxue Historical Antecedents and Contemporary Aspirations
    China Perspectives 2011/1 | 2011 The National Learning Revival The Revival of Guoxue Historical Antecedents and Contemporary Aspirations John Makeham Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/5372 DOI: 10.4000/chinaperspectives.5372 ISSN: 1996-4617 Publisher Centre d'étude français sur la Chine contemporaine Printed version Date of publication: 1 January 2011 Number of pages: 14-21 ISSN: 2070-3449 Electronic reference John Makeham, « The Revival of Guoxue », China Perspectives [Online], 2011/1 | 2011, Online since 30 March 2014, connection on 28 October 2019. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/ 5372 ; DOI : 10.4000/chinaperspectives.5372 © All rights reserved China perspectives Special feature The Revival of Guoxue Historical Antecedents and Contemporary Aspirations JOHN MAKEHAM* ABSTRACT : After some opening remarks on the recent commodification of guoxue, I first trace the rise of guoxue in the contemporary period, and then I examine two topics in more detail: guoxue’s historical and contemporary transformation into an academic discipline; and the immediate origins of guoxue’s pronounced ethnoepistemological character. Through this examination my aim is to bring into greater relief some of the aspirations invested in guoxue by its contemporary protagonists, and also to highlight some of the conundrums associated with those aspirations. KEYWORDS : Guoxue, academic discipline, ruxue, ethnoepistemology, Chinese philosophy, cultural identity ust as the discourse on culture in 1980s China was dubbed by some a 53rd-generation descendant commentators as “culture fever” ( wenhuare ) and the rise of ruxue in of the poet Bai Juyi.…“My J the 1990s was referred to as “ ruxue fever,” so too the strong interest greatest talent is seduction, in guoxue over the past five or so years has been characterised as and not even Confucius is out “guoxue fever.” (1) Although much of the discourse on guoxue over the past of the question.
    [Show full text]
  • Images of Women in Four Modern Chinese Historical Plays
    Fall 1993 61 Male Ideology and Female Identity: Images of Women in Four Modern Chinese Historical Plays Haiping Yan Modern Chinese historical drama emerged with the modern spoken drama in the May 4th New Culture Movement in the early 20th century. The modern spoken drama, a Chinese imitation and appropriation of the form of Western modern drama which putatively began with Ibsen, was a radical negation of the Chinese traditional theatre represented by forms such as classical Peking Opera. Starting in 1917, New Youth, which was launched by a group of young intellectuals and became one of the most influential journals of the New Culture Movement, vigorously criticized the traditional theatre in which "no man speaks human language" and advocated a new drama about "real people's real life."1 In their radical challenge to the traditional theatre, some of the young intellectuals argued that the genre of historical drama could not do anything useful but "repeat the old habits and stories."2 Guo Mo-ruo, a radical activist and one of the founders of modern Chinese literature, had a different view on this issue. In his opinion, the long history of China contains "the soul of the nation and indicates its future fate." What he wanted to do, as he announced in 1923, was to project a living energy into the dead skin of history and to generate a new form of historical drama which combines the past and the present into an image of the future.3 The trilogy named Three Rebellious Women was his first dramatization of this theoretical claim and, in a literal sense, the beginning of modern Chinese historical drama.
    [Show full text]
  • Rethinking Chinese Kinship in the Han and the Six Dynasties: a Preliminary Observation
    part 1 volume xxiii • academia sinica • taiwan • 2010 INSTITUTE OF HISTORY AND PHILOLOGY third series asia major • third series • volume xxiii • part 1 • 2010 rethinking chinese kinship hou xudong 侯旭東 translated and edited by howard l. goodman Rethinking Chinese Kinship in the Han and the Six Dynasties: A Preliminary Observation n the eyes of most sinologists and Chinese scholars generally, even I most everyday Chinese, the dominant social organization during imperial China was patrilineal descent groups (often called PDG; and in Chinese usually “zongzu 宗族”),1 whatever the regional differences between south and north China. Particularly after the systematization of Maurice Freedman in the 1950s and 1960s, this view, as a stereo- type concerning China, has greatly affected the West’s understanding of the Chinese past. Meanwhile, most Chinese also wear the same PDG- focused glasses, even if the background from which they arrive at this view differs from the West’s. Recently like Patricia B. Ebrey, P. Steven Sangren, and James L. Watson have tried to challenge the prevailing idea from diverse perspectives.2 Some have proven that PDG proper did not appear until the Song era (in other words, about the eleventh century). Although they have confirmed that PDG was a somewhat later institution, the actual underlying view remains the same as before. Ebrey and Watson, for example, indicate: “Many basic kinship prin- ciples and practices continued with only minor changes from the Han through the Ch’ing dynasties.”3 In other words, they assume a certain continuity of paternally linked descent before and after the Song, and insist that the Chinese possessed such a tradition at least from the Han 1 This article will use both “PDG” and “zongzu” rather than try to formalize one term or one English translation.
    [Show full text]