| 
(1) Frozen Color in China. Washington Post, Jan 6, 2012 (photo gallery). http://www.washingtonpost.com/li ... 8CE3dP_gallery.html
 
 (2) Necee Regis, In Guangzhou, China, Plenty to Discover — and to Buy. Washington Post, Jan 8(?), 2012.
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/li ... QAIETVfP_story.html
 
 Note:
 (a) The travelogue said, "My nephew-in-law, Brian O’Connor, parks in a crowded outdoor shopping district — think of New York’s Canal Street on steroids."
 
 Canal Street (Manhattan)
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canal_Street_(Manhattan)
 (forms the main spine of [New York] Chinatown)
 (b) In ENGLISH-speaking world, Kiki is a name for females--a pet form of names in K.
 (c) "luohan' in Mandarin:
 (i) arhat (n; Sanskrit, from present participle of arhati he deserves; akin to Greek alphein to gain; First Known Use 1870):
 "a Buddhist who has reached the stage of enlightenment"
 www.m-w.com
 (ii) arhat (Buddhism)
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arhat_(Buddhism)
 (Arhat, in Buddhism, signifies a spiritual practitioner who has realized certain high stages of attainment. The implications of the term vary based on the respective schools and traditions)
 (d) Palladian architecture
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladian_architecture
 (Venetian architect Andrea Palladio (1508–1580))
 (e) The "hitch" in "soon-to-be-hitched Chinese couples" is a transitive verb that means:
 "2a : to catch or fasten by or as if by a hook or knot <hitched his horse to the fence post>
 * * *
 c : to join in marriage <got hitched>"
 www.m-w.com
 
 |