Showing 821 - 840 results of 944 for search '(((spinnae OR (voice OR (spine OR sspinge))) OR (pine OR spine)) OR (pinna OR (pin OR ming)))', query time: 0.21s Refine Results
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    重新建构女性的自我认同 : 以苏童“红粉”系列小说为例 = Re-constructing woman’s self identity : a case study of Su Tong’s “Hong Fen” series by 陈品秀 Tan, Ping Siew

    Published 2015
    “…In fact, male authors also can listen well and express the inner voice of women, and well-known vanguard author, Su Tong, is a good example. …”
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
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    Segregation in carbon steels by Liong, Wei Hao.

    Published 2009
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
  15. 835

    Fashioning Sanyan Stories into contemporary written novellas —— With A Bird and Seven Lives as an example by Gu, Chunguang

    Published 2023
    “…Evolving from bianwen and chuanqi of the Tang dynasty, Chinese vernacular stories emerged as an independent literary genre in the late Ming period, thanks to the compilation of Sanyan collections by Feng Menglong. …”
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    Thesis-Master by Coursework
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    Quantifying the internal and external drivers of Southeast Asian rainfall extremes on decadal timescales by Wang, Shouyi, Ummenhofer, Caroline C., Murty, Sujata A., Nguyen, Hung T. T., Buckley, Brendan M.

    Published 2024
    “…Volcanic aerosols, the most effective radiative forcing during the last millennium, contributed to both the Ming Dynasty Drought (1637–1643) and the Strange Parallels Drought (1756–1768). …”
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    Article
  20. 840

    Environmental and social factors influencing the spatiotemporal variation of archaeological sites during the historical period in the Heihe River basin, northwest China by Shi, Zhilin, Chen, Tingting, Storozum, Michael J., Liu, Fengwen

    Published 2021
    “…In the Western Xia-Yuan period (AD 1038–1368), people mainly settled in the lower reaches of the Heihe River basin and only returned to the middle reaches of the Heihe River basin during the Ming and Qing dynasties (AD 1368–1912). Although climate change and the local environment affected human activities in Heihe River basin, geopolitical events, such as forced mass migrations, are more responsible for influencing the distribution of archaeological sites over the past 2000 years.…”
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    Journal Article