Tan, the pinyin romanization of 譚, is the 67th most common surname in China. The surname Chen based on the various Min dialects also sometimes romanizes as "Tan".
Two origins have been suggested for the Tan surname:
A study by geneticist Yuan Yida has found that people with either of the two Tan surnames are especially concentrated in Hunan Province which would tend to support these accounts. This does not mean that they are the most common surnames in that province.
The cuneiform ud sign, also ut, and with numerous other syllabic uses, as well as multiple sumerogramic uses is a common sign for the mid 14th-century BC Amarna letters and the Epic of Gilgamesh. The sign is constructed upon the single vertical stroke , with various positionings of two wedge-strokes at the left, sometimes approximately centered, or often inscribed upwards to the left, the second wedge-stroke (or 'angled line-stroke'), occasionally inscribed/ligatured upon the first. The wedge-strokes can have any size, are often smaller than the vertical, but as an example, Amarna letter EA 256, can be almost as large as the vertical.
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, sign ud is listed as used for the following linguistic elements:
Sumerograms
The usage numbers for each linguistic element in the Epic of Gilgamesh are as follows:lah--(2), par--(5), pir--(4), tam--(32), tú--(46), ud--(30), ut--(95), uṭ-(7), BABBAR-(1), UD-(75), UTU-(58).
A picul /ˈpɪkəl/ or tam is a traditional Asian unit of weight, defined as "a shoulder-load, as much as a man can carry on a shoulder-pole".
The word pikul appeared as early as the mid 9th century in Javanese.
Following Spanish, Portuguese, British and most especially the Dutch colonial maritime trade, the term picul was both a convenient unit, and a lingua franca unit that was widely understood and employed by other Austronesians (in modern Malaysia and the Philippines) and their centuries-old trading relations with Indians, Chinese and Arabs. It remained a convenient reference unit for many commercial trade journals in the 19th century. One example is Hunts Merchant Magazine of 1859 giving detailed tables of expected prices of various commodities, such as coffee, e.g. one pikul of Javanese coffee could be expected to be bought from 8 to 8.50 Spanish dollars in Batavia and Singapore.
As for any traditional measurement unit, the exact definition of the picul varied historically and regionally. In imperial China and later, the unit was used for a measure equivalent to 100 catties.
Jeannie may refer to:
Jeannie is a 30-minute Saturday morning animated series based on the 1965–1970 NBC sitcom I Dream of Jeannie produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions in association with Screen Gems Television and broadcast on CBS from September 8, 1973 to August 30, 1975.
The animated series features the eponymous 2,000-year-old genie character (voiced by Julie McWhirter) with her master and love interest Corey Anders (voiced by Mark Hamill), a high school student and surfer, and his best friend Henry Glopp (voiced by Bob Hastings).
Many of Corey and Henry's misadventures often involved run-ins with their rival, S. Melvin Farthinghill (voiced by Tommy Cook), a snooty rich kid and the series' antagonist whom Henry often addressed as "Smellvin" or "Smelly." S. Melvin was often a competitor with Corey when it came to girls, undermining his efforts at every turn. Comedian and former Three Stooges star Joe Besser voiced Babu, a cowardly, bumbling, immature genie-in-training under Jeannie's charge. His typical magic words are "Yapple Dapple!" which usually gets everyone around him into a pickle, even himself.
Jeannie is a feminine name and a petform of Jeanne, a variant form of Jechonan (יוחנן). It is ultimately originated from the Hebrew masculine name (יְהוֹחָנָן) Jehohanan or (יוֹחָנָן) Yohanan meaning 'Jehovah is gracious' or 'The Lord gives mercy'. Jeannie may be a nickname of Jeannette.
Women with the given name include:
Junto a Mí
Aah, ooh, aah
Whoo! Na na
Ah la la, ah la la la whoo!
Hoy volví a nacer
Puede comprender
Que sin Ti no existe nada
Hoy pensando en Ti
Fue que conocí
La verdad que yo buscaba
En la obscuridad
De mi tempestad
Fue mi puerto Tu palabra
Eres Tú
Quien me guía
Siempre Tú
Quien está
Junto a mí
Cuando más me haces falta
Junto a mí
Cuando pierdo la calma
Hoy logré vencer
El temor
Que ayer
Me impedía darte el alma
Hoy mi corazón
Tiene una razón
De latir con esperanza
En la obscuridad
De mi tempestad
Fue mi puerto tu palabra
Eres Tú
Quien me guía
Siempre Tú
Quien está
Junto a mí
Cuando más me haces falta
Junto a mí
Cuando pierdo la calma
Junto a mí
Junto a mí
Oh, junto a, junto a mí
Junto a mí
El mundo perece de tentación
La vida carece de tanto amor
Oh, no, no no no...whoo!
A la la (ba ba ba da da)
Ha, aah-ooh whoo
Hey-hey aah
Junto a mí (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
Cuando más me haces falta (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
Junto a mí (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
Cuando pierdo la calma (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
Junto a mí (quien me guía siempre, quien está; quien me guía
siempre, quien está)
Junto a mí (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
Cuando pierdo la calma (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
No, no no oh junto a, junto a mí (quien me guía siempre, quien está)
No, no no no no no no junto a mí
Written by Rudy Pérez/Joel Numa/Mark Heimermann/Nate Sallie