Find link
language:
af: Afrikaans
als: Alemannisch
[Alemannic]
am: አማርኛ
[Amharic]
an: aragonés
[Aragonese]
ar: العربية
[Arabic]
arz: مصرى
[Egyptian Arabic]
as: অসমীয়া
[Assamese]
ast: asturianu
[Asturian]
az: azərbaycanca
[Azerbaijani]
azb: تۆرکجه
[Southern Azerbaijani]
ba: башҡортса
[Bashkir]
bar: Boarisch
[Bavarian]
bat-smg: žemaitėška
[Samogitian]
be: беларуская
[Belarusian]
be-tarask: беларуская (тарашкевіца)
[Belarusian (Taraškievica)]
bg: български
[Bulgarian]
bn: বাংলা
[Bengali]
bpy: বিষ্ণুপ্রিয়া মণিপুরী
[Bishnupriya Manipuri]
br: brezhoneg
[Breton]
bs: bosanski
[Bosnian]
bug: ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ
[Buginese]
ca: català
[Catalan]
ce: нохчийн
[Chechen]
ceb: Cebuano
ckb: کوردیی ناوەندی
[Kurdish (Sorani)]
cs: čeština
[Czech]
cv: Чӑвашла
[Chuvash]
cy: Cymraeg
[Welsh]
da: dansk
[Danish]
de: Deutsch
[German]
el: Ελληνικά
[Greek]
en: English
eo: Esperanto
es: español
[Spanish]
et: eesti
[Estonian]
eu: euskara
[Basque]
fa: فارسی
[Persian]
fi: suomi
[Finnish]
fo: føroyskt
[Faroese]
fr: français
[French]
fy: Frysk
[West Frisian]
ga: Gaeilge
[Irish]
gd: Gàidhlig
[Scottish Gaelic]
gl: galego
[Galician]
gu: ગુજરાતી
[Gujarati]
he: עברית
[Hebrew]
hi: हिन्दी
[Hindi]
hr: hrvatski
[Croatian]
hsb: hornjoserbsce
[Upper Sorbian]
ht: Kreyòl ayisyen
[Haitian]
hu: magyar
[Hungarian]
hy: Հայերեն
[Armenian]
ia: interlingua
[Interlingua]
id: Bahasa Indonesia
[Indonesian]
io: Ido
is: íslenska
[Icelandic]
it: italiano
[Italian]
ja: 日本語
[Japanese]
jv: Basa Jawa
[Javanese]
ka: ქართული
[Georgian]
kk: қазақша
[Kazakh]
kn: ಕನ್ನಡ
[Kannada]
ko: 한국어
[Korean]
ku: Kurdî
[Kurdish (Kurmanji)]
ky: Кыргызча
[Kirghiz]
la: Latina
[Latin]
lb: Lëtzebuergesch
[Luxembourgish]
li: Limburgs
[Limburgish]
lmo: lumbaart
[Lombard]
lt: lietuvių
[Lithuanian]
lv: latviešu
[Latvian]
map-bms: Basa Banyumasan
[Banyumasan]
mg: Malagasy
min: Baso Minangkabau
[Minangkabau]
mk: македонски
[Macedonian]
ml: മലയാളം
[Malayalam]
mn: монгол
[Mongolian]
mr: मराठी
[Marathi]
mrj: кырык мары
[Hill Mari]
ms: Bahasa Melayu
[Malay]
my: မြန်မာဘာသာ
[Burmese]
mzn: مازِرونی
[Mazandarani]
nah: Nāhuatl
[Nahuatl]
nap: Napulitano
[Neapolitan]
nds: Plattdüütsch
[Low Saxon]
ne: नेपाली
[Nepali]
new: नेपाल भाषा
[Newar]
nl: Nederlands
[Dutch]
nn: norsk nynorsk
[Norwegian (Nynorsk)]
no: norsk bokmål
[Norwegian (Bokmål)]
oc: occitan
[Occitan]
or: ଓଡ଼ିଆ
[Oriya]
os: Ирон
[Ossetian]
pa: ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
[Eastern Punjabi]
pl: polski
[Polish]
pms: Piemontèis
[Piedmontese]
pnb: پنجابی
[Western Punjabi]
pt: português
[Portuguese]
qu: Runa Simi
[Quechua]
ro: română
[Romanian]
ru: русский
[Russian]
sa: संस्कृतम्
[Sanskrit]
sah: саха тыла
[Sakha]
scn: sicilianu
[Sicilian]
sco: Scots
sh: srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
[Serbo-Croatian]
si: සිංහල
[Sinhalese]
simple: Simple English
sk: slovenčina
[Slovak]
sl: slovenščina
[Slovenian]
sq: shqip
[Albanian]
sr: српски / srpski
[Serbian]
su: Basa Sunda
[Sundanese]
sv: svenska
[Swedish]
sw: Kiswahili
[Swahili]
ta: தமிழ்
[Tamil]
te: తెలుగు
[Telugu]
tg: тоҷикӣ
[Tajik]
th: ไทย
[Thai]
tl: Tagalog
tr: Türkçe
[Turkish]
tt: татарча/tatarça
[Tatar]
uk: українська
[Ukrainian]
ur: اردو
[Urdu]
uz: oʻzbekcha/ўзбекча
[Uzbek]
vec: vèneto
[Venetian]
vi: Tiếng Việt
[Vietnamese]
vo: Volapük
wa: walon
[Walloon]
war: Winaray
[Waray]
yi: ייִדיש
[Yiddish]
yo: Yorùbá
[Yoruba]
zh: 中文
[Chinese]
zh-min-nan: Bân-lâm-gú
[Min Nan]
zh-yue: 粵語
[Cantonese]
jump to random article
Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Hu Yinglin 3 found (11 total)
alternate case: hu Yinglin
Classic of Mountains and Seas
(3,218 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
scholar from Ming dynasty Hu Yinglin believed that the book was written by a curious person during the Warring States period. Hu Yinglin recorded in his Shaoshi
Mouzi Lihuolun
(2,319 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
rejected the Mouzi as a spurious work that was falsely attributed to Mouzi. Hu Yinglin 胡應麟 (1551–1602) was first to deny the textual authenticity, and suggested
Li He
(3,746 words)
[view diff]
exact match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Gu Ying (顧瑛), as well as the early Ming poet Gao Qi. The Ming scholar Hu Yinglin read Li's poetry politically as "the tones of a ruined state" and recognized