X-Nico

unusual facts about Geng


Geng

Norbert Geng (b. 1965), German lawyer and professor of special business law


BoBoiBoy

The four were originally employed by Les' Copaque Production, a company first founded by Nizam and Safwan, and are famous for the animation series Upin & Ipin and film Geng: Pengembaraan Bermula, directed by Nizam.

Geng Xiaofeng

Geng Xiaofeng joined the Shandong Luneng youth team at the age of fourteen and would go on to join the Shandong Luneng's first team squad when the manager Ljubiša Tumbaković promoted him to act as backup for Li Leilei and then later for Yang Cheng.

Huashu

Geng Xin 庚辛 "The Geng and Xin Families" (5.10) recounts how two neighbors, figuratively named after the 7th and 8th Celestial stems, used different materials to construct fish ponds.

Lost on Journey

Arriving at the crowded airport, Li finds he has been mistakenly booked in the economy class and sits next to the first-time flyer Niu Geng (Baoqiang Wang), who is a naïve and gullible migrant worker.

Menggu Ziyun

The British Library manuscript includes two prefaces in Chinese dated 1308, one by Liu Geng 劉更 and one by Zhu Zongwen 朱宗文 (Mongolian name Bayan) of Xin'an 信安 (modern Changshan County in Zhejiang).

Surimi

In China, the food was used to make fish ball (魚蛋/魚丸) and ingredients in a thick soup known as "Geng" (羹) common in Fujian cuisine.

Wang Xiaojie

Wang's secretary Zhang Shuo reported back to Wu Zetian in Luoyang (now capital) and stated, "Wang Xiaojie was brave and willing to fight to the death. He faithfully served the empire, fought into enemy territory, and fought many with few. But he had no backup, and so he was defeated." Wu Zetian posthumously honored Wang as the minister of defense and created him the Duke of Geng.

Zhang Baosheng

Some high-ranking Communist Party leaders in Beijing grew curious at reports of Zhang's alleged powers, and Zhang was one of the "Healers with Extraordinary Powers" invited into the Zhongnanhai leadership compound to treat the daughter-in-law of General Chen Geng.

Zu Geng

Zu Gengzhi (480-525), sometimes referred to as Zu Geng, Chinese official and mathematician, son of Zu Chongzhi


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