223,965 research outputs found
Sue Wah Chin
Photographs from Library & Archives NT : PH0553/0057 and PH0553/0077Sue Wah Chin was born in Canton, China on 21 July 1901. As the daughter of wealthy parents she trained as a school teacher, which was an occupation and level of education not normally open to women at the time. On completion of her studies she married Chin Ack Sam in a large and lavish ceremony. In 1928 the Chin's and their children arrived in Australia. Here they lived and worked in Darwin's Chinatown for a number of years until deciding to go back to China in order for the children to complete their education. Sue Wah Chin and her family remained in China from 1933 to 1938 when the Japanese invaded China.
On their return to Darwin, Sue Wah Chin and her daughter, Darwina helped her father-in-law Chin Toy with his tailoring business. After the horrors of the Japanese invasion of China the family also suffered the bombing of Darwin by Japanese forces. The large extended family was evacuated to Adelaide where they were able to make a living running a restaurant on Rundle Street. Once again they returned to Darwin, and opened another restaurant in the Don Hotel with their friends Albert Fong and Harry Chan. Some years later Sue Wah bought an old 'stone house' in Cavenagh Street. This stone house was originally built by a Chinese merchant in the 1880s. This historic house was later to be named the Sue Wah Chin Building. Sue Wah lived in this stone house raising her eleven children and numerous grandchildren. She died in March 2000.Business WomanChines
72. Chin Wakei ou Chin Nakei (chin. Tch'en Ho-k'ing) ( ?- ?)
Iwao Seiichi, Sakamato Tarō, Hōgetsu Keigo, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Kobayashi Tadashi, Kanazawa Shizue. 72. Chin Wakei ou Chin Nakei (chin. Tch'en Ho-k'ing) ( ?- ?). In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 3, 1975. Lettre C. p. 56
72. Chin Wakei ou Chin Nakei (chin. Tch'en Ho-k'ing) ( ?- ?)
Iwao Seiichi, Sakamato Tarō, Hōgetsu Keigo, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Kobayashi Tadashi, Kanazawa Shizue. 72. Chin Wakei ou Chin Nakei (chin. Tch'en Ho-k'ing) ( ?- ?). In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 3, 1975. Lettre C. p. 56
58. Chin-bata→ Chin-ori
Iwao Seiichi, Sakamato Tarō, Hōgetsu Keigo, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Kobayashi Tadashi, Kanazawa Shizue. 58. Chin-bata→ Chin-ori. In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 3, 1975. Lettre C. p. 43
chin music
chin nSurely there must be somebody on the back benches who can play the mouth organ? No? even a bit of chin music would help. [Add to DNE chin n, to 1971 quot ]PRINTED ITEM DNE SupG.M. Story JUN. 9 1989[check] WKUsed I and SupUsed I and SupUsed SupCHIN MUSIC, MOUTH MUSICChecked by Cathy Wiseman on Sun 26 Apr 201
chin music
chin nVery seldom was there any real music, such as a fiddler, so the young people danced to what was called 'chin music." That is to say, one of the older people would sing ditties, chant and clap his hands.yesDNE-cit GMSSept 73Used I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedCHIN MUSIC, MOUTH MUSICChecked by Cathy Wiseman on Sun 26 Apr 2015; Card marked DNE-cit, but not used
Author-wise bibliometric analysis based on entropy.
Author-wise bibliometric analysis based on entropy.</p
chin-music
cheek nOne of the favorite pastimes of a crew, while 'in baitin,' is a dance...There was no fiddler, but only a boy who sang for them, or, according to the Newfoundland vernacular, made 'chin-music.' ... ... when I entered, the host was leadiing off with an opening break-down. The orchestra furnished 'chin-music.' The musician was a young man who hummed in a sort of grunting nasal tone various tunes of proper time for square dances... it was a succession of nasal tones in the key of C...Their dances were all the square dances, and generally the well- known lancers. The various figures were called off by one of the crew.W. Kirwin 3/79 JH 3/79Used I and SupUsed I3Not usedFACE, cheek music, CHIN MUSIC, MOUTH MUSICChecked by Cathy Wiseman on Sat 25 Apr 201
Gastromyzon punctulatus Inger & Chin 1961
<i>Gastromyzon punctulatus</i> Inger & Chin, 1961 BE <p> <i>Gastromyzon punctulatus</i> Inger & Chin, 1961: Choy & Chin, 1994: 762 (Belalong-Temburong basin upstream of Kuala Belalong); Kottelat & Lim, 1995: 235 (Brunei); Tan, 2006: 82 (Temburong basin).</p>Published as part of <i>Sulaiman, Zohrah, Hui, Tan Heok & Lim, Kelvin Kok Peng, 2018, Annotated checklist of freshwater fishes from Brunei Darussalam, Borneo in Zootaxa 4379 (1)</i>, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4379.1.2, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1172314">http://zenodo.org/record/1172314</a>
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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