Top 10 similar words or synonyms for yiqing

wenguang    0.900952

guowei    0.892440

jiafu    0.887559

jingyu    0.882046

yixiang    0.880828

gongquan    0.880289

weiying    0.879845

guangyi    0.879760

tiexin    0.878525

guoping    0.876509

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for yiqing

Article Example
Zhu Yiqing Seals were invented to reproduce images in great amount conveniently. However, Zhu Yiqing and Xue Yongjun cast off the convenient and simple nature of seals when painting with them, changing the features of seals from printing-like into painting with a complicated process. All of the seals they use are carved by themselves at a very slow speed, and are then overprinted on canvas one by one, revealing a brand new painting way completely different from Pop Art’s speed duplication. From plane surface to space, from characters to paintings, and from the images composition to illusions, the creation does not only show a new connection and balance between printing and painting, the plane and the perspective, as well as the machinery duplication and handmade production, but also implicate the two artists’ perceptual explanation during the seemingly rational constructing. Conflicting yet merging on the visual experience, it is the dual nature of the two artists’ artworks, which is also the impression they show to the audience.
Zhu Yiqing Zhu and Xue with their artworks show a strong sense of duality on the selection of subjects, the usage of medium and skills and the formal expression, trying to eliminate the boundaries between the east and the west, the native and the foreign, the traditional and the modern, the handmade and the machinery as well as the perspective and the plane, thus creating any possible balance among those conflicts or contradictions and outlining the new image painting of digital era.
Touzi Yiqing While studying in that tradition, he supposedly came to the realization that any attempt to teach Buddhism through the study of words could not succeed. He again left, this time settling on the Zen practitioner Fushan Fayuan, also known as Yuanjian, as his teacher. While Touzi's predecessor was said to be the last remaining teacher in the Caodong/Sōtō Zen tradition, the lineage flourished with Touzi's devoted students, recovering much of its former prominence.
Zhou Yiqing Zhou was among more than 500 Chinese scientists assigned to investigate for a new antimalarial medication during the Cultural Revolution. Established by Mao Zedong-led government in 1967, the collaborative research was called Project 523. In 1972 Tu Youyou and her team discovered artemisinin (originally known as qinghaosu). The new compound was demonstrated to be an effective drug against "Plasmodium falciparum". A more stable compound artemether was synthesised from artemisinin. In 1981 the National Chinese Steering Committee for Development of Qinghaosu (artemisinin) and its Derivatives authorised Zhou to work on artemether. Zhou showed that artemether combined with another antimalarial lumefantrine was the most potent of all antimalarial drugs. He worked alone for four years, and was joined by Ning Dianxi and his team in 1985. They found that in clinical trials the combined tablet (artemether/lumefantrine) had very high cure rate of severe malaria, more than 95%, including in areas where multi-drug resistance is experienced. They applied for patent in 1991, but granted only in 2002. In 1992 they got it registered as a new drug. Novartis then noticed the new drug and made a deal for mass production. In 1999 Novartis obtained the international licensing rights and gave the brand name Coartem. It was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2009.
Touzi Yiqing The scholar Morten Schlütter notes that this form of lineage transfer "has no real parallel in early Chan literature". This refers to the fact that Touzi was able to be considered the immediate heir to Dayang's lineage without having met him, and that Fayuan was able to hold Dayang's lineage "in trust" without actually being a bona fide heir. Schlütter further interprets Huihong's likely embellished account as an attempt to strengthen the rather weak link between Touzi and Dayang, who was the last Caodong monk recorded in the prestigious "Transmission of the Lamp", in order to solidify the legitimacy of the lineage.