Ting Pang-hsin
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Ting Pang-hsin
Ting Pang-hsin (; 28 November 1936 – 30 January 2023) was a Chinese linguist, and an academician of the Academia Sinica. Biography Ting was born in Ju-kao County ( Rugao County), Kiangsu (Jiangsu), on 28 November 1936. After the defeat of the Kuomintang by the Chinese Communist Party in 1949, Ting relocated to Taiwan. He attended National Taiwan University, where he earned his bachelor's degree in 1959 and master's degree in 1963 both in Chinese literature. He went on to receive his doctoral degree from the University of Washington in 1969. Ting worked at the Academia Sinica after university. He was elected assistant research fellow in August 1964, associate research fellow in February 1970, and research fellow in August 1975. In August 1981, he was named acting director of the Institute of History and Philology, confirmed in March 1985. He was a professor of National Taiwan University from 1975 to 1989 and the University of California, Berkeley from 1989 to 1998. During hi ...
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Ding (surname)
Ding () is a Chinese family name. It consists of only 2 strokes. The only two characters that have fewer strokes are "一" and "乙". Distribution In 2019 it was the 48th most common surname in Mainland China. Origins There are four main hypothesized sources of Ding: *The earliest record of this surname in history was the Duke of Ding during the Shang Dynasty. *The name derived from the ancestral surname Jiang. Duke Ding of Qi was the second recorded ruler of the State of Qi. After his death, his descendants adopted his posthumous name Ding as their clan name in his honor. *During Spring and Autumn period, the descendants of Duke Ding of Song also used Ding as their last name. *During the Three Kingdoms period, a general, Sun Kuang of the Wu kingdom, accidentally burnt the food supply and as a punishment, the king Sun Quan ordered this general to change his last name to Ding; the king did not want to bear the same last name as the general. The Ding hometown is supposedly nor ...
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William Shi-Yuan Wang
William Shi-Yuan Wang (Chinese: 王士元; born 1933) is a linguist, with expertise in phonology, the history of Chinese language and culture, historical linguistics, and the evolution of language in humans. He is Chair Professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Emeritus Professor of the University of California, Berkeley, and Academician of Academia Sinica . Early life William Shi-Yuan Wang was born in 1933 in Shanghai, China, and spent his preschool years in Anhui. His early schooling was in Shanghai. Education Wang attended Columbia College in New York City on a scholarship (1951-1955) earning a B.A. in Liberal Arts. He pursued graduate work in Linguistics at the University of Michigan, where he received his M.A. in 1956, and his Ph.D. in 1960, working with Gordon E. Peterson. His dissertation, "Phonemic Theory A (with Application To Midwestern English)" Academic career Academic positions Empirical and theoretical contributions Sinitic languages Wang ...
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