Eps 1247: wang yue hua
— The too lazy to register an account podcast
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Heidi Cook
Podcast Content
In addition to his international bestseller, Integrated Chinese, Professor Liu has helped directly and indirectly promote nearly one million Chinese language learners. Moreover, this independent attitude has led to his writing books with many of the world's best authors, including "Breezing Chinese" by Wang Yue Hua and "Chinese Language and Culture in the Middle East and North Africa," as well as his own books on Chinese history and culture. He is survived by his wife and three children, several grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and many friends.
Better still, Professor Liu has been involved in creating a series since his retirement that reflects the latest advances in foreign language education. The Chinese language and culture in the Middle East and North Africa should remain relevant for today's educators and learners. In Germany and Norway he worked in studies with Siegfried Schiller, Wolfgang Schmitt and Hans-Heinrich Hahn, among others.
Over 100 birds were followed on the radio, and in China alone there were more than 1,000 birds of prey in the wild. Forget the international praise, he is also a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the International Society for Language and Cultural Studies.
Since 1998, his team has carried out a number of current projects, including the study of the coniferous forests of Qinghai - the Tibetan Plateau, the Great Wall of China and the Yangtze River Valley. Today he mainly studies conifers in the forest of Qinghai and the Tibetan plateau, including their flora and fauna. He has also studied and been interested in the relationship between birds of prey and their prey, as well as the ecology and evolution of birds in China. His team will begin to study the impact of climate change on birds and other bird species on the environment and wildlife in Tibet.
In Germany he worked with Prof. Jochen Martens and together they published a book on the ecology and evolution of birds at the Great Wall of China and in the Yangtze Valley. Over the past 17 years, he has conducted a number of research projects in China, including the study of the coniferous forests of Qinghai - the Tibetan Plateau, the Great Wall and the Great Wall of China. From 1991 to 1994 he worked in Germany, and in 1995 he began working in northwest China.
He competed in 24 GMs and finished in the same third place with a TPR of 2735 with 4.5 / 10 points. In this competition Magnus Carlsen was the only Weselin Topalov to score an increase, followed by two other top players in the world, Magnus Magnus and Sergey Karjakin, who each scored 7.9, the highest score in their respective groups, and the second best score for a player from China, behind Han Han. Wang Yue shared the first and second tiebreak with Magnus Carlsen and scored 8 / 13 on tpr 2806.
Wang received board four and remained unbeaten in his group with 5.5 / 5.9 points, but in the second group he did not do as well with 4.7 / 8.0, while the other top players from China, Han Han and Wang Yue, each scored 4 / 5 / 9 points. After the end of October, it reached a weak 5 / 8 in November, losing almost ten rating points, falling below the 2700 mark for the first time since July 2008.
This positive result brought the Group back to the 2700-point mark for the first time since March 2012. In August 2006, Wang scored 5.10 / 1.8 / 1.1 and came third in his group with 4.7 / 8.0 points. Wang Yue played in the 2010 World Chess Championship, this time with 5 / 5 / 9 , which helped his country to fourth place.
Wang Yue won both team gold and individual silver at the 17th Asian Team Championships in Zaozhuang, China in May 2012. Wang won team silver and individual gold at 5.5 / 5 / 9. in his second board game. At the 2012 World Chess Championship, Wang played for the national team, which secured him gold with a stunning TPR 2916 of 7 / 9.
Wang scored the best individual result at the Chinese men's team championships in Jinan, where he scored 9 / 11. Wang Yue's tie for 26th place at the 2011 Summer Universiade against Li Chao, who scored an astonishing 8.5 / 5 / 9.
Wang was second at the 2012 Summer Universiade with a score of 4.7 and a performance rating of 2695. Wang Yue scored 3.10 points and scored 2.5 / 3.0 / 4.6 / 5.2 / 6 in the team competition at the 2011 Summer Olympics in Beijing. At the 2013 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, China, he played against the best players in the world, finishing second behind the winner Li Chao.