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Gold and Jade Filled Halls: A Cognitive Linguistic Study of Financial and Economic Expressions in Chinese and German
Shelley Ching-yu Hsieh, National Cheng Kung University, in collaboration with May Hsin-mei Huang, Lydia Yu-Ling Chang, Sophia Chen-Ying Wu, and Carrie Hsin-Wen Tseng
Biographical note
Shelley Ching-yu Hsieh, Ph.D. (2001) in Linguistics from Tübingen University, is professor at the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature at National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan. The focus of her research is a cross-cultural comparison of the cognitive semantics and sociolinguistics of Mandarin Chinese and German.
Contributors include: Shelley Ching-yu Hsieh; May Hsin-mei Huang; Lydia Yu-Ling Chang; Sophia Chen-Ying Wu; Carrie Hsin-Wen Tseng.
Contributors include: Shelley Ching-yu Hsieh; May Hsin-mei Huang; Lydia Yu-Ling Chang; Sophia Chen-Ying Wu; Carrie Hsin-Wen Tseng.
Readership
Those who are interested in language, economics, socio-cultural studies and those interested in learning German and Mandarin Chinese.
€176.00$245.00
Hans Ulrich Vogel, Tübingen University
In Marco Polo was in China Hans Ulrich Vogel undertakes a thorough study of Yuan currencies, salts and revenues, by comparing Marco Polo manuscripts with Chinese sources and thus offering new evidence for the Venetian’s stay in Khubilai Khan’s empire.
€113.00$146.00
Edited by Bettina Gramlich-Oka and Gregory Smits
This volume deepens and revises our understanding of early-modern Japan by examining connections between economic thought and policy. It also engages issues of interest to scholars of world history and economic thought outside Japan or East Asia.
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