Bailin Chan Temple
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Bailin Chan Temple
Bailin may refer to: *Bailin bracket, piece of grip equipment used in film production *Bailin station, station of Wuhan Metro *Bailin Temple (other), several temples * Bailin Township, township in Bama Yao Autonomous County, Guangxi, China People with the surname *Alex Bailin (born 1969), English barrister *Gladys Bailin (born 1930), American choreographer, dancer, and instructor *Hao Bailin (1934–2018), Chinese theoretical physicist *Zhu Bailin (朱柏麟), Chinese actor who was cast in the television series ''General's Lady ''General's Lady'' (; ) is a 2020 Chinese television series that based on the novel with the same title by Yanbo Jiangnan. It stars Tang Min and Caesar Wu in the title role along with Lu Jia, Liu Yinjun and Cao Junxiang. It firstly aired in You ...'' {{disambiguation, given name, surname Chinese given names English-language surnames ...
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Bailin Bracket
The Bailin bracket is a piece of grip equipment used in film production. The Bailin bracket is a slotted metal device, with a 1-1/8" junior pin on one end. It is meant to support a 2x4 or 2x6 piece of wood from any junior pin receiving device. External linksBalin Bracket Film production {{film-tech-stub ...
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Bailin Station
Bailin station (), is a station of Line 4 of Wuhan Metro. It entered revenue service on September 25, 2019. It is located in Caidian District and it is the western terminus of Line 4. Station layout Gallery File:Entance_A_of_Bailin_Station(Wuhan).jpg, Entrance A File:Wuhan_Bailin_Station_01.jpg, Concourse File:Wuhan_Bailin_Station_03.jpg, Platform Naming in English In writing, the Chinese name of this station is the same with "Berlin Berlin ( , ) is the capital and largest city of Germany by both area and population. Its 3.7 million inhabitants make it the European Union's most populous city, according to population within city limits. One of Germany's sixteen constitu ...", the capital city of Germany. The English name came from the romanization of such Chinese name was first written as "Bolin", same with the pronunciation of Berlin in Chinese, and thus it appeared in news reports jokingly as "a Wuhan Metro line that can take you to Germany". Shortly after the ...
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Bailin Temple (other)
Bailin Temple, also known as Monastery of the Cypress Grove may refer to: * Bailin Temple (Beijing) in Dongcheng District, Beijing, near the Yonghe Palace * Bailin Temple (Hebei) in Zhaoxian County, Hebei, famous for its pagoda {{Disambig ...
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Bailin Township
Bailin Township () is a township in Bama Yao Autonomous County, Guangxi, China. As of the 2018 census it had a population of 18,000 and an area of . Administrative division As of 2016, the township is divided into five villages: * Yangchun () * Nanong () * Namo () * Luopi () * Pingtian () Geography The township is situated at southeastern Bama Yao Autonomous County. It borders Dahua Yao Autonomous County in the east, Pingguo in the south, and Tiandong County in the west. The Lingqi River winds through the township. Economy The township's economy is based on nearby mineral resources and agricultural resources. Significant crops include grain, corn, soybean, Castanea mollissima, peanut, fruit, and sugarcane. Recently, silkworm breeding has significantly developed in the township. The region also has an abundance of gold, titanium, manganese and silicon Silicon is a chemical element with the symbol Si and atomic number 14. It is a hard, brittle crystalline solid with a blue ...
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Alex Bailin
Alex Bailin KC (born 23 January 1969) is an English barrister specialising in criminal and international law, together with human rights and media law at Matrix Chambers. Bailin is also a legal writer for The Guardian, The Times and The Lawyer, among others. Education and career Bailin read mathematics at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and law at Sussex University. He initially worked as a derivatives trader in the City of London. Bailin was called to the Bar ( Lincoln's Inn) in November 1995 and took silk in 2010. Bailin practices in human rights, public and administrative law, public international law, criminal fraud, criminal law and media law. Bailin is a Deputy High Court Judge in the Administrative Court and a Recorder at the Crown Court. Bailin contributes legal articles to The Guardian, The Times, The Lawyer, New Statesman and various legal journals. Cases Criminal fraud and corporate crime * R v Railtrack plc and its former Chief Executive (corporate manslaughter, H ...
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Gladys Bailin
Gladys Bailin (born 1930) is a choreographer, dancer, and instructor. She studied and worked at the Henry Street Playhouse in New York, joined the avant-garde, modern dance company of Alwin Nikolais and later taught at and became the first female Distinguished Professor at Ohio University. Early life and career Gladys Bailin was born in New York City on February 11, 1930. As a child she took piano, dance, and voice classes. At age eight she began attending classes at the Henry Street Playhouse. She trained and worked at the Playhouse from the 1940s into the 1960s. At the Henry Street Playhouse Bailin met Alwin Nikolais in 1948. She graduated from Hunter College in 1952. She performed with the Nikolais company as well as the Murray Louis Dance Company. She toured with both companies throughout the United States and internationally. Teaching From 1966 to 1972, Bailin taught at the New York University School of the Arts (now the Tisch School). During the 1960s she also perfor ...
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Hao Bailin
Hao Bailin or Hao Bolin (; 26 June 1934 – 7 March 2018) was a Chinese theoretical physicist, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Fudan University professor. Biography Hao was born in Beijing, 1934. He graduated from then Beijing Russian Institute in 1954, then went to Kharkiv and studied mining at Kharkov Engineering-Economic Institute. He transferred to the Department of Mathematics and Physics, Kharkiv University in 1956 and completed his bachelor's degree in the next three years. He entered the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences as a trainee researcher afterwards. He went to Moscow State University and Soviet Academy of Sciences for the further studying on physics since 1959. Hao had meant to become a postgraduate under Lev Landau, but Landau was injured in a road accident in 1962, he returned to China without a postgraduate diploma. He continued his job in CAS until the Cultural Revolution began. During the decade, he participated the ...
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General's Lady
''General's Lady'' (; ) is a 2020 Chinese television series that based on the novel with the same title by Yanbo Jiangnan. It stars Tang Min and Caesar Wu in the title role along with Lu Jia, Liu Yinjun and Cao Junxiang. It firstly aired in Youku on 9 October 2021 every Wednesdays until Saturdays. This series also aired in Taiwan. This series started filming in October 2019 and finished in January 2020. Plot This series is tell about the love story between a playful and lively girl, Shen Jin (played by Tang Min) and a "Demon General" Chu Xiuming (played by Caesar Wu). Shen Jin grew up in luxury as a member of the royal family. After the emperor decrees an arranged marriage, she is married off to the Earl of Yongning (also known as the "demon general") who defends the borders. Although she falls in love with her husband, Chu Xiu Ming, at first sight, she finds it difficult to blend in. Shen Jin gradually sheds her spoiled and entitled attitude and becomes a force to be reckoned ...
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Chinese Given Names
Chinese given names () are the given names adopted by speakers of the Chinese language, both in majority-Sinophone countries and among the Chinese diaspora. Description Chinese given names are almost always made up of one or - usually - two characters and are written ''after'' the surname. Therefore, Wei () of the Zhang () family is called "Zhang Wei" and not "Wei Zhang". In contrast to the relative paucity of Chinese surnames, given names can theoretically include any of the Chinese language's 100,000 characters and contain almost any meaning. It is considered disrespectful in China to name a child after an older relative, and both bad practice and disadvantageous for the child's fortune to copy the names of celebrities or famous historical figures. A common name like " Liu Xiang" might be possessed by tens of thousands of people, but generally they were not named ''for'' the athlete. An even stronger naming taboo was current during the time of the Chinese Empire, when other bea ...
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