Bulletin, Volym 34The Museum, 1962 |
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
A-style décor elements Animal triple band Arch Archaic Chinese belonging belt Bernhard Karlgren bilabials corr Black Tai BMFEA bowl Carl Kempe Ch'ang-p'ei's and Chou Ch'engtu ch'ing pai Chang Shen-yi Chi-chou China Chinese Bronzes Cicadas Circle bands collection decorated dialects Dissolved T'aot'ie dragons dynasty examples excavated ǝr-class flower glaze Han dynasty Hanging blades hie-sheng Huai initial k'ü corr k'ü sheng Karlgren kiln knob Kuei Li-ting Lo-yang Loshan medial MFEA mirror motifs muong Museum neck-belt occur Omei p'ing-sheng palatals corr Pazyryk petals phonetic Pillsbury prunus quatrefoil rice Rising blades Round Ting Seikwa Pl shang shang-sheng shape sherds Shï Shi king Silk Road similar simple finals specimens Square Yi stress style Sung dynasty syllables T'aot'ie temmoku tonal tone class tone sandhi Tsun variants vase velars corr village vowel wares words Yüan Yung-ho zero
Populära avsnitt
Sida 104 - Polynesian culture" and concludes . . . that the typical Melanesian fishing implements belong to the south Asiatic culture sphere of which Melanesia seems to constitute an easterly outpost. The implements typical of Polynesia and Micronesia, on the other hand, belong to the North-Eurasian fishing culture, except in those cases where they have a pure inter-Oceanic distribution.
Sida 1 - Shina-kodo seikwa j£$|$~i&'fB?F!M$F or selected relics of ancient Chinese bronzes from collections in Europe and America . . . 7 vols.
Sida 104 - ... neighbouring Polynesian outliers is quite Polynesian. The Malay Archipelago is generally considered to be the region whence the Polynesians emigrated to their present place of abode. As regards the fishing implements these two regions have practically nothing in common. On the contrary, the Polynesian fishing implements have their closest parallels in north-eastern Asia, above all in Japan.
Sida 103 - L'habitat, le monde et le corps humain en Extrême-Orient et en Haute-Asie. (Journal Asiatique, vol. 245. Paris, 1957.) RA Stein: Architecture et pensée religieuse en Extrême-Orient.
Sida 96 - The budget of the state fixed, the object is to secure its payment : and in order to understand how this is done, it is necessary to know from what sources the public revenue proceeds.
Sida 45 - Some bronzes in the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities. BMFEA 21 (1949), 1-25.
Sida 1 - B. Karlgren, A Catalogue of the Chinese Bronzes in the Alfred F. Pillsbury Collection, Minneapolis, 1952; M. Loehr, "The Bronze Styles of the Anyang Period," Archives of the Chinese Art Society of America, VII, 1953; Hsiao-t'un (The Yin-Shang Site at Anyang, Honan), vol.
Sida 103 - Legends and Cults in Ancient China", The Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Bulletin No.
Sida 104 - André G. Haudricourt et Louis Hédin: L'Homme et les plantes cultivées. (Paris 1943.
Sida 140 - Even if, for the sake of argument, we were to assume that the bulk of the kia-tsie (later improved into hie-sheng) were already chosen in pre-Chou time, and, on the other hand, that Malmqvist's ProtoChinese ad~, ad/ ', ad~, ad...