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Are Older Adults More Risky Readers? Evidence From Meta-Analysis
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In: Psychol Aging (2022)
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The Historical Context and Meaning Origin of the Word of "Stereotype Party Writing"
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In: CPC History Study (2021)
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Oriental Language Recognition (OLR) 2020: Summary and Analysis ...
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Visual-aware Attention Dual-stream Decoder for Video Captioning ...
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Additive Phoneme-aware Margin Softmax Loss for Language Recognition ...
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An Integrated Framework for Two-pass Personalized Voice Trigger ...
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Pragmatic Competence and Willingness to Communicate Among L2 Learners of Chinese
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In: Front Psychol (2021)
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Bridging the Gap between Conceptual Change Research and Bilingualism
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In: Teaching Culturally and Linguistically Diverse International Students in Open or Online Learning Environments: A Research Symposium (2021)
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Manifold Learning-based Word Representation Refinement Incorporating Global and Local Information ...
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Stele record of sacrifice to the northern stronghold Mount Yiwulü, 1754(祭北鎮醫巫閭山,1754) ...
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[A Poem] Following the rhyme of the Imperial Grandfather, [Written while] Gazing at Mount Yiwulü [when passing through Guangning] for the second time, 1778(望醫巫閭山再依皇祖元韻,1778) ...
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[A Poem] Following the rhyme of the imperial Grandfather, [Written while] Gazing at Mount Yiwulü [when passing through Guangning] for the third time, 1783(望醫巫閭三依皇祖元韻,1783) ...
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Sundry odes on visiting Mount Yiwulü, 1754(遊醫巫閭雜詠,1754) ...
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Abstract:
This stele is located on the west side of the courtyard behind the Hall of Divine Horses (神馬殿) and in front of the Hall of Imperial Incense (御香殿) at Beizhen Temple. The size of this stele is 350cm (body height), 114cm (width), and 32cm (depth). The body of this stele is in perfect condition. This stele sits on a tortoise-shaped base and has a dragon forehead without inscriptions. The title of this stele is “Sundry Odes on Visiting Mount Yiwulü”, which refers to four seven-syllable quatrains composed and calligraphed by Emperor Qianlong in the ninth month of the 19th year of his reign (1754) while passing through Guangning on his second eastern tour. The poems describe four scenic locations on Mount Yiwulü: Cuiyun Screen, Daoyin Valley, Shengshui Basin and Kuangguan Pavilion. ...
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URL: https://doi.library.ubc.ca/10.14288/1.0392054 https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0392054
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Poems of the four views of Mount Yiwulü, 1783(題醫巫閭山四景,1783) ...
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Motivation trajectories of Chinese L2 learners in a Sino-Canadian study-abroad program – a longitudinal study
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