yiwu zhi造句
例句與造句
- It is also known as the " Nanyi yiwu zhi " ( WS詧puir?_, " Record of Strange Things of the Southern Borders " ).
- In the first year of the Qing Daoguang Emperor ( 1821 ), Zeng Zhao ( 姅 ) produced a version of " Yangyilang Zhushu " ( hg畫螑W刦N ) from ancient textual sources then in 1849 the " Yiwu Zhi ".
- Ma ( 1978 ) identified passages in books written between the 3rd and 12th centuries as " sources " for many " Nanfang caomu zhuang " entries, for example, the " Yiwu zhi " was a probable sources for the banana and orange descriptions.
- Li ( 1979 : 119 ) notes that the " Yiwu Zhi " ( quoted in the " Qimin yaoshu " ) may possibly be the original source for this " Nanfang caomu zhuang " entry : " the orange tree has white flowers and reddish fruits, which have fragrant peels and also sweet taste.
- The ( c . 3rd century ) " Nanzhou yiwu zhi " ( WS2mpuir?_, " Record of Strange Things of the Southern Continent " ) or " Nanfang yiwu zhi " ( WS筫puir?_, " Record of Strange Things of the South " ) was written by Wan Zhen (, ??), and may have been one of Ji Han's sources for his book.
- It's difficult to find yiwu zhi in a sentence. 用yiwu zhi造句挺難的
- The ( c . 3rd century ) " Nanzhou yiwu zhi " ( WS2mpuir?_, " Record of Strange Things of the Southern Continent " ) or " Nanfang yiwu zhi " ( WS筫puir?_, " Record of Strange Things of the South " ) was written by Wan Zhen (, ??), and may have been one of Ji Han's sources for his book.
- In March 1947, The Commercial Press in Shanghai published a compendium of works based on the " Yiwu Zhi " followed in 1991 by the Guangdong Publishing Group ( ^ Nw鶴Hr茤釼 ) issuing the " Lingnan Cultural Archive " ( ?\ WS噀?^ ), which included Wu Yongzhang's ( 4T8l鄗 ) work " Yiwu Zhi Jiyi Jiaozhu " ( _ ir?_ 憦ZO ! h鑜 ).
- In March 1947, The Commercial Press in Shanghai published a compendium of works based on the " Yiwu Zhi " followed in 1991 by the Guangdong Publishing Group ( ^ Nw鶴Hr茤釼 ) issuing the " Lingnan Cultural Archive " ( ?\ WS噀?^ ), which included Wu Yongzhang's ( 4T8l鄗 ) work " Yiwu Zhi Jiyi Jiaozhu " ( _ ir?_ 憦ZO ! h鑜 ).
- Updated from the earlier text " Yiyu tuzhi " ( " Illustrated Account of Foreign Lands " ), which was in turn based on the fourteenth-century " Yiwu Zhi " ( " Account of Foreign Lands " ), the " Luochong lu " was a popular work during the Ming era and was reprinted many times, both as a standalone title and within anthologies and encyclopedias.