322,824 research outputs found

    Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s object-describing lyrics

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    The thesis focuses on the object-describing lyrics written by Chou Chin-Chen and investigates the selection of ideas, analysis of images, and artistic characteristics. This thesis is divided into six chapters. Chapter 1 is divided into two sections. The first section introduces the research motivation, the research methods, and literature review. The second section studies the origin of object-describing lyrics to describe the relationship of objects and literature and to define the concept of object-describing lyrics. Chapter 2 indicates the formation background of Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s lyrics. The first section discusses the historical origin and litery development of object-describing lyrics in terms of different dynasties: Early Chin dynasty, The Han dynasty, and Wei-Jin Dynasty. In addition, the section further investigates the civil object-describing lyrics in Dunhuang and intellectuals\ue2 object-describing lyrics in early North Song Dynasty. The second section discusses the factors of writing with the respect of the social and cultural background and makes the list of Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s lyrics in order to compare the background influences and literature characteristics. Chapter 3 analyzes the content of Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s lyrics based on the definition made in the previous sections. The chapter discusses 32 lyrics to analyze the selection of ideas with six categories: season, plants, nature, appearance and time. There are two seasonal lyrics (lantern and Chongjiu festivals), ten plant lyrics (plum flowers, willows, pear, lotus, sweet-scented osmanthus, and apricot), seven nature lyrics (snow, moon, and spring rain). The discussion focuses on the image analysis including prototypes and trends and further investigates the historical backgrounds, content structures, writing skills and historical evaluations. Chapter 4 studies and compares Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s object-describing lyrics in terms of the artistic characteristics, rhetoric skills, language styles, and content structures. Chapter 5 describes the comments and influences of Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s object-describing lyrics. Chapter 6 concludes the achievement of Chou Chin-Chen\ue2s object-describing lyrics

    Deserticossus pullus Hua, Chou, Fang & Chen 1990

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    <i>Deserticossus pullus</i> (Hua, Chou, Fang & Chen, 1990) <p> <i>Holcocerus pullus</i> Hua, Chou, Fang & Chen, 1990: 58 –59.</p> <p>Type locality: Barkol, Xinjiang [NW China, Xinjiang, Dzhungarian Gobi, Barkol]. Type material (holotype) in NWAU, not examined.</p> <p>Distribution: China, Xinjiang, Dzhungarian Gobi.</p>Published as part of <i>Yakovlev, Roman V. & Witt, Thomas J., 2017, Three new species and one new subspecies of Deserticossus Yakovlev, 2006 (Lepidoptera: Cossidae) from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Russia, with world catalogue of the genus, pp. 379-395 in Zootaxa 4269 (3)</i> on page 392, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4269.3.3, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/582468">http://zenodo.org/record/582468</a&gt

    Allochotes piceus Murakami, Yamasako, Chou & Yang, 2013, sp. n.

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    Allochotes piceus sp. n. (Figs 1 D– 1 F, 4 H– 4 N, 6 C– 6 D, 7 C– 7 D) Type series. Holotype: ♂ (TARI), “[Taiwan] Dahanshan (Mt.)/ Chunri Township/ Pingtung County/ 8. VII. 2012 / H. Murakami leg.” [locality name also written by Chinese character]. Paratypes: [Taoyuan] 1 ♂ (CCCT), Mt. Lala-shan, Fusing Township, 19. VIII. 1999, W-I. Chou leg. [Hsinchu] 1 ♂ (EUMJ), Jianshi Township, 14. VII. 2012, H. Murakami leg. [Yilan] 2 ♂♂ (CCCT), Siyuan Pass, Nanshan Village, Datong Township, 16. VIII. 1999, W-I. Chou leg. [Nantou] 1 ♀ (CKSJ), Nanshanshi, Renai Township, 9. V. 1977, W. Suzuki leg.; 1 ♀ (TARI), Meifeng, Alt. ca. 2,150m, Renai Township, 24–26. VI. 1981, K-S. Lin & W-S. Tang leg.; 1 ♂ (CKSJ), Nanshanshi, Renai Township, 14. IV. 1985, Y. Kusakabe leg. [Hualien] 1 ♀ (EUMJ), Karenko (= Hualien City), 20. VII.– 24. VIII. 1919, T. Okuni leg. [Kaohsiung] 1 ♂ 1 ♀ (CKSJ), Mt. Nanfeng-shan, Taoyuan Township, 28. IV. 1981, S. Fukuda leg.; 1 ♂ (CCCT), Mt. Shinan-shan, Alt. ca. 1,600m, Taoyuan Township, 27. IV. 1997, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♀ (TARI), Tengjhih, Taoyuan Township, 2–3. VI. 2008, C-F. Lee leg. [Taitung] 1 ♀ (CCCT), Lijia Forest Road, Beinan Township, 1. VII. 2008, C-C. Chen leg.; 1 ♀ (CCCT), same locality, 1. VII. 2009, C-C. Chen leg.; 2 ♀♀ (CCCT), Yenping Forest Road, Alt. ca. 1,500m, Yenping Township, 27. VI. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ 2 ♀♀ (CCCT), same locality, 16. VII. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ 1 ♀ (IZAS), Lijia Forest Road, Alt. ca. 1,250m, Beinan Township, 26. VI. 2010, W-I. Chou leg. [Pingtung] 1 ♂ (CCCT), same locality as holotype, Alt. ca. 1,100m, 21. V. 2009, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ (CCCT), same locality, Alt. ca. 1,200m, 21. VII. 2009, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ (IZAS), same locality, 6. V. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 3 ♀♀ (CCCT), same locality, Alt. ca. 1,300m, 6. V. 2010, W- I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ (CCCT), same locality, Alt. ca. 600–1,200m, 7. V. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ (CCCT), Mt. Peidawu-shan, Alt. ca. 1,100m, Taiwu Township, 27. V. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♀ (IZAS), same locality as holotype, 5. VIII. 2010, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂ (CCCT), same locality, 27. VIII. 2010, C-C. Chen leg.; 1 ♀ (CCCT), same locality, 12. VIII. 2011, C-C. Chen leg.; 1 ♂ 2 ♀♀ (CWCT), same data as holotype, W-I. Chou leg.; 1 ♂, 3 ♀♀ (EUMJ), same data as holotype; 1 ex (TARI), same locality as holotype, 11. VII. 2012, Y-T. Chung leg.; 1 ♂ 1 ♀ (EUMJ), same locality as holotype, 13. VII. 2012, H. Murakami leg.; 3 ♂♂ 1 ♀ (EUMJ), same locality as holotype, 2. VI. 2013, H. Murakami leg. Type locality. Mt. Dahan-shan, Chunrih Township, Pingtung County, Taiwan. Diagnosis. This species is easily distinguishable from the other Taiwanese congeners by having piceous elytra. The species is very similar to A. sauteri, but differs in the following characteristics: posterior margin of pygidium and 8 th sternite emarginate at middle; spicular apodeme connected with spicular plates; phallobasic apodeme weakly dilated apically and incised at the apex; ventral phallobasic plates well sclerotized. Description. Male (n = 11, Figs 1 D– 1 F): Head, antennomeres, pronotum, legs and abdomen yellowish orange; apical parts of mandibles black. Elytra metallic piceus. Head clothed with yellowish suberect setae on the area from frons to vertex and brownish setae on occiput; pronotal disk with yellowish and brownish suberect setae; elytra clothed with black suberect setae, mingled with yellowish setae near humeri; abdomen sparsely set with yellow suberect setae. Maxillary palpi with the last segment short, nearly triangular, obliquely truncate at apex. Antennomeres 4 to 8 weakly serrate, gradually becoming shorter apically; 9 th and 10 th serrate, as wide as long. Pronotum 1.3–1.5 (1.4) times as wide as long. Elytra oblong, weakly convex dorsally, 1.1–1.5 (1.4) times as long as wide, widest near middle, sparsely set with setigerous punctures throughout. Pygidium (Fig. 4 H) with posterior margin emarginate at middle. Eighth sternite (Fig. 4 I) semicircular; posterior margin faintly emarginate. Spicular fork (Fig. 4 J) with elongate intraspicular plate; spicular lobes weakly colored and almost membranous; spicular apodeme 1 / 2 as long as the total length of spicular fork. Aedeagus in fully inflated condition (Figs 6 C– 6 D) orthogonally curved ventrally at the base of CM in lateral view; CM cylindrically swollen, slightly dilated basally, thence constricted at base; phallus cylindrically swollen. Tegmen (Figs 4 K– 4 L) with phallobase oblong, nearly half length of tegmen, roundly pointed at apex; phallobasic apodeme in ventral view elongate, slightly dilated apically from apical 1 / 3 and incised at apex, almost straight in lateral view; ventral phallobasic plates well sclerotized; phallobasic struts divaricated from apical 1 / 3. Phallus (Figs 4 M– 4 N) longer than tegmen, slightly sinuous in lateral view; phallic plates uncinate at apex, densely with bi- or tridentate denticles from apical 1 / 4 to subapices of ventral margins. Female (n = 9): Similar to male, but the apical margin of 7 th sternite slightly and triangularly incised at middle. Pygidium with posterior margins (Fig. 7 C) roundly projected posteriorly; pygidial struts elongate. Eighth sternite (Fig. 7 D) with apical margin roundly projected posteriorly. Pronotum 1.3–1.6 (1.4) times as wide as long. Elytra 1.3–1.5 (1.4) times as long as wide. Measurements. Male (n = 11): BL 6.3–8.4 (7.2) mm, PL 1.4 –2.0 (1.7) mm, PW 2.0– 2.7 (2.3) mm, EW 3.2– 4.1 (3.6) mm, EL 4.2–5.9 (4.9) mm. Female (n = 9): BL 6.5–8.2 (7.5) mm, PL 1.5 –2.0 (1.8) mm, PW 2.1–2.7 (2.5) mm, EW 3.0– 4.1 (3.7) mm, EL 4.4–5.5 (5.0) mm. Etymology. The specific name is derived from the piceous elytra. Distribution. Taiwan (Taoyuan, Hsinchu, Yilan, Nantou, Hualien, Kaohsiung, Taitung, Pingtung).Published as part of Murakami, Hiroyuki, Yamasako, Junsuke, Chou, Wen-I & Yang, Ganyan, 2013, Review of the genus Allochotes (Coleoptera: Cleridae: Neorthopleurinae) from Taiwan, pp. 565-577 in Zootaxa 3710 (6) on pages 568-569, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3710.6.3, http://zenodo.org/record/21692

    Earinus bicolor Chou et Sharkey 1989

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    Earinus bicolor Chou et Sharkey, 1989 Earinus bicolor Chou & Sharkey, 1989: 184; Chen & Yang, 2006: 155. Distribution. China (Taiwan, Fujian?).Published as part of Tang, Pu, Achterberg, Cornelis Van & Chen, Xue-Xin, 2018, Review of the genus Earinus Wesmael (Hymenoptera, Braconidae, Agathidinae) from China, pp. 345-358 in Zootaxa 4504 (3) on page 349, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4504.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/260643

    sj-pdf-1-asp-10.1177_00037028221080489 - Supplemental material for Determination of H<sub>2</sub> Densities Over a Wide Range of Temperatures and Pressures Based on the Spectroscopic Characterization of Raman Vibrational Bands

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-asp-10.1177_00037028221080489 for Determination of H2 Densities Over a Wide Range of Temperatures and Pressures Based on the Spectroscopic Characterization of Raman Vibrational Bands by Ying Chen and I-Ming Chou in Applied Spectroscopy</p

    Elasmosoma (Elasmosoma) taiwanense Chou 1985

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    Elasmosoma (Elasmosoma) taiwanense Chou, 1985 Elasmosoma taiwanense Chou, 1985: 477; He et al., 2000: 327. Biology. Unknown. Distribution. Oriental Region: China.Published as part of Li, Jun, Achterberg, Cornelis van, Zheng, Minlin & Chen, Jiahua, 2020, Review of Neoneurini Bengtsson (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Euphorinae) from China, pp. 281-289 in Zoological Systematics 45 (4) on page 286, DOI: 10.11865/zs.202034, http://zenodo.org/record/461796

    Yang Ze 楊澤,N'aie pas de doute

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    Recueil de poèmes de Yang Ze, traduction du chinois (Taiwan) vers le français par Mélie Chen et Tan-Ying Chou. Préface de Tan-Ying Chou et Mélie Chen, p.7-14

    A Comparative Study of the Disease Writings of Chou Fen-Ling and Chen Huseh

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    This thesis is a comparative study of the disease writings of Chou Fen-Ling and Chen Huseh. The early compositions of Chou Fen-Ling are known as sincere and exquisite works. Chen Huseh\ue2s fictions are famous for the avant-garde lust and sexual issues. However, the similarities and differences between the disease writings of Chou Fen-Ling and Chen Huseh might be neglected by scholars. Evidently, some distinction and resemblance exist between the two authors in their life experiences, personal disease history, and the process of writing. The approach of biographical research, theories of narratology, and text analysis are applied in this thesis that aims to disclose the details as well as the philosophy of the disease writings of both authors. Chou Fen-Ling and Chen Huseh materialize their writing intentions into ill bodies performing the accusation against the society, and furthermore express their concern about the marginal minority of the society. Both authors create remarkable styles in the disease writings and ultimately reclaim the liberty of physical body and interior consciousness of human beings
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