#qifu
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peridoxikal-redux · 11 months ago
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[VocaIdol AU]: The event performers and singing robots across the globe have been waiting for!
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weekly-utau-originals · 4 months ago
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This week's UTAU original song is Bù Lǎn Qīngfēng Bù Wàngyuè by litterzy, Chunbai, Mouzhize and Chufanyan featuring Qili and Qifu. The song also features Qili and Qifu's DeepVocal voicebanks.
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jushula /d͡ʒˈuːʃˈuːlˈa/ : (is) fragrant
Positive Descriptor. Present tense. Formal.
📖 Definition & Synonyms
→ Definition: When your perfume announces your arrival before you even enter the galaxy. → Synonyms: scented, aromatic
🗨️ Example Usage
→ Romanised: Moja-Jackie Tyler-meatloaf'wiJushula. Qifu-o'titela. → English: Jackie Tyler's meatloaf is very fragrant. That can't be normal. → Audio:
→ Sollifreyan Font (v1):
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🧩 Modifiers
→ Comparative: shoJushula (more fragrant) → Superlative: choJushula (most fragrant) → Procedural: jusaret (fragrantly)
🔍 Advanced
Etymology and Morphological Breakdown
ju- (Root): Derived from 'jum', meaning 'sense actively'.
shu- (Stem): From 'shu', signifying 'action' or 'movement'.
-la (Suffix): A common suffix for descriptors.
Usage and Additional Notes
Conceptualisation of 'jushula': This term combines the ideas of actively sensing with a sense of action.
Associations with 'jushula': The term might be used in contexts where fragrance plays a role in determining an item's value, importance, or desirability, from appreciating exotic scents to recognising familiar smells.
(GIL Gallifreyan Conlang Guide (coming soon))
Gallifreyan Word for Wednesday by GIL
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furnitureshoppingday · 9 days ago
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Cat House Apartment qifu Moder ... Price 7827.36$ CLICK TO BUY
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zman1175 · 2 months ago
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https://seekingalpha.com/article/4727049-qifu-technology-dividend-stock-to-benefit-from-chinas-stimulus
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ladygwyndolin · 8 months ago
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Finished reading the currently released chapters of "Bing Jiao Meimei Zhi Xiang Rang Wo Qifu Ta." I was pleasantly surprised by this one, although as it stands it seems to be dragging its feet quite a bit so I'm worried about another bad ending. I'll still read along, though.
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craftercat · 8 months ago
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One consistent problem among the Murong, Qifu and Tufa Xianbei seems to be how brothers had as strong a claim to the throne as their ruler's sons based on old tradition. Did the Tuoba encounter this sort of problem?
There was a lot of infighting within the Tuoba clan. In Tuoba Gui's reign, his uncle Tuoba Quduo laid a rival claim to the throne and Tuoba Yi attempted rebellion (he was pardoned but later executed when Tuoba Gui went insane). In Tuoba Si's reign, Tuoba Yue attempted rebellion and was executed. Many Tuoba clan members died in the chaos of Tuoba Tao's death and Tuoba Jun's early reign.
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wildbeautifuldamned · 11 months ago
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QIFU 3' jeweled TURTLE pill stash snuff box ENAMELED RHINESTONE Gold Tone + Box ebay Bil-Din Treasures Store
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topreadmanhua · 1 year ago
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Please Bully Me, Miss Villainess!
I, Yvonne, reincarnated into an otome game as the evil noble. Based on all other villainesses ever written, a character like me, hated by every reader, should obviously be focusing on bullying the villainess, leading her into the various romance routes. However, something’s wrong with the female protagonist, Elsa! I-I’ve told you that you’re too close to me. Don’t come any further! Elsa: “Yvonne, Yvonne~ How will you bully me today?”
Alternative:
Please Bully Me, Villainess!, Please Tease Me, Villainess!, Qing Qifu Wo Ba, E Yi Xiaojie!, Qǐng Qīfù Wǒ Ba, È Yì Xiǎojiě!, 请欺负我吧,恶役小姐!
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aishavass · 1 year ago
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"The epidemic has significantly disrupted the global economy, and knowing how it has affected the Ce
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q-anime-q · 5 years ago
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Source: Haomen Qifu de Chuntian (Chapter 181)
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furnitureshoppingday · 11 days ago
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Cat House Apartment qifu Moder ... Price 7827.36$ CLICK TO BUY
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bookofjin · 6 years ago
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After Fei, 383b
Previous posts:
https://bookofjin.tumblr.com/post/184898671714/after-fei-383a
Murong Chui escapes capture
(This section is a redo of the final section of the previous post, as I managed to dig up another source)
While Fu Jian had allowed Murong Chui's journey to Ye, Quan Yi secretly dispatched soldiers at night to intercept him before he crossed the bridge across the During the night Murong Chui dreamt he was travelling along a road. The road came to an end, and he looked back to see Master Kong's grave, flanked by eight mounds. When he woke up, Murong Chui summoned someone to interpret the dream. The dream interpreter thought that the road coming to an end meant it could not be travelled. Furthermore, at Master Kong's tomb, the grave-site (丘) is paired with eight (八) mounds.  丘 and  八 combines to form  兵 "troops”, meaning there would be troops hiding in ambush on the road. (TPYL400 quoting the Xu Jinyangqiu)
Murong Chui instead left the road and prepared rafts to cross at a different place. He also sent his Army Director Cheng Tong, dressed in his clothes and riding his horse, with some of the page boys to the bridge. When the ambushers sprung their trap, Cheng Tong galloped away and escaped. (ZZTJ105)
I would guess the dream sequence is an original part of this story, which Sima Guang has excised in his retelling. I am not sure if Sima Guang used the Xu Jinyangqiu as a source, he may have gotten it from the SLGCQ where supernatural stories are very common.
Fu Jian arrives at Chang'an
In the twelfth lunar month, 10 January – 7 February 384, Fu Jian arrived back at his capital Chang'an. Before entering he wept for the loss of his brother Fu Rong. Once inside the city, he announced his defeat to the ancestral temple, proclaimed a great amnesty and increased  the rank of his civil and military officials by one grade. He also announced several fairly generic government reform measures, such as honing the troops and inspecting agriculture, relief for orphans and the elderly, and tax remittance for the families of those lost during the campaign. Fu Rong was given the posthumous rank and titles of Grand Marshal and Duke Ai (“the Lamented”) of Yangping. (JS114)
Lü Guang lays siege to Qiuci
Meanwhile the Qin empire was still expanding in the west. Earlier Fu Jian had appointed his general Lü Guang Envoy Holding the Tally and Commander-in-Chief of All Army Affairs of Western Chastising, and tasked him with conquering the city states of the Western Regions with an army if 70 000 troops and 5 000 heavy cavalry. Lü Guang like Fu Jian was of Di ethnicity. (JS122)
When Lü Guang arrived at Gaochang he heard that Fu Jian had invaded Jin. He first hesistated, wishing to wait for further orders, but his advisor Du Jin convinced him he should speedily attend to the important task he had been given. So Lü Guang set out across the desert. For a long distance there was no water and his men grew worried. But Lü Guang reminded them how a spring had burst forth to reward the old Han general Li Guang (different character than Lü Guang) for his virtue. Heaven would surely reward them as well. Soon after there was a heavy rainfall. (JS122)
Lü Guang arrived at Yanqi, and the king of Yanqi, Niliu, submitted together with the other neighbouring states. Bochun, the King of Quici, however decided to resist. So Lü Guang marched against Quici, where he arrived in the twelfth month, and laid siege to the city. Lü Guang's army took position south of the city and built fortified encampments every 5 li (about 2 km). They built imitation soldiers dressed in wooden armour, and placed them on the walls of the encampment. Bochun on his side pulled the people living outside the wall, and employed commoners and nobles alike in defence of the city. (JS122)
As the siege dragged on there were several portents pointing to Lü Guang's future greatness. The blood vessels on his left arm rose up to form the characters  巨霸, “Vast Hegemon”. One night a huge black creature appeared, moving with a swaying motion, with horned head and eyes shining like lightning. The creature disappeared in the morning clouds, but left behind a track five li long and thirty paces wide, and the scales now hidden in the earth shone like if they were still there. Lü Guang recognized this as a black dragon. Soon after a rain storm wiped out the dragon's track. Du Jin explained that dragons were portentous creatures of good fortune, and demonstrated Lü Guang's virtue and future greatness. (JS122)
Qifu Guoren gathers forces
The Qifu branch of the Xianbei are said to have originally migrated south from north of the desert and settled in the Longxi. During the early Western Jin, their leader Youlin (or Tuolin) united many of the local Xianbei. A century later, in 371 AD, his descendant Sifan was forced to submit to Qin. Fu Jian appointed him General who Garrisons the West. When Sifan died, his son Guoren inherited his titles. (TPYL127)
In 383 AD, when Fu Jian was planning his Shouchun campaign, he summoned Qifu Guoren to be General of the Van, planning for him to command the vanguard cavalry. Then news arrived that Guoren's uncle Butui had rebelled in Longxi, so Fu Jian instead chose to send Guoren to deal with him. (JS125) Presumably because Butui was not only a rebel against Qin, but also posed a challenge to Guoren's leadership of the Qifu Xianbei.
But Butui welcomed Guoren's return, and pushed him forward to take leadership. Guoren gathered followers for a great feast, and held a speech where he said that the Fu clan had only risen to power due to the chaotic downfall of Zhao. Having acquired a vast territory, they did not allow for peace to show their virtue, but rather engaged in distant schemes, wasting the lands, defying Heaven and angering the people. It was the Way of Heaven that such a thing must be brought down. With his followers' support, Guoren would become the ruler of the region. (JS125)
When news reached Guoren that Fu Jian had been defeated, he summoned and assembled the various local tribes. Those who did not submit willingly, he conquered and annexed. Eventually he had gathered a force numbering a hundred thousand. (JS125) We next hear from Qifu Guoren in 385 AD, so this was not an instantaneous process.
Murong Chui comes to Ye
Murong Chui arrived at Anyang, and sent his Army Advisor Tian Shan with a note to the commander at Ye, Fu Pi, Duke of Changle and Fu Jian's oldest son. Fu Pi worried about Murong Chui's true intentions, but decided to go south and meet with Murong Chui personally. (ZZTJ105)
Fu Pi at first planned to attack Murong Chui, but his Attendant Gentleman Jiang Rang protested that since Murong Chui had so far not openly displayed any rebellious intentions, Fu Pi could not kill him on his own initiative. Instead he should treat Murong Chui with all courtesy but put stern soldiers in charge of guarding him. Then he could inform the court of his feelings, and, after receiving official advise, start plotting against Chui. On the other side Murong Chui was advised by one of his officials, Zhao Qiu, that he ought to seize Fu Pi at meeting, but Murong Chui rejected this plan. (ZZTJ105)
And so, while I guess it was a fairly tense meet-up, no hostile actions were taken by either side. Fu Pi found quarters for Murong Chui to the west of Ye, and Murong Chui explained the circumstances around the defeat south of the Huai. (JS123) One source adds that Murong Chui now began plotting the restoration of Yan with former Yan officials. (ZZTJ105)
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nicotomato · 3 years ago
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❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Manhua Title: Please Bully Me, Miss Villainess! (Qing Qifu Wo Ba, E Yi Xiaojie!)
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ladygwyndolin · 8 months ago
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Started reading "Bing Jiao Meimei Zhi Xiang Rang Wo Qifu Ta."
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craftercat · 8 months ago
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What was Tuoba Gui’s reputation amongst the various states during his lifetime? How did it shift throughout his life?
His reputation was poor for a few years in other states after the relatively arbitrary execution of Cui Cheng. This seems to have been the first case of the arbitrary executions of ministers that would be common in his late reign.
Due to this, refugees in the Jin dynasty did not want to seek refuge with him (because part of the reason for Cui Cheng's execution was not defaming Sima Dezong enough in letters).
Later on, in Tuoba Si's reign, Qifu Chipan remarked that the Northern Wei rulers "accumulated a soldierly bearing and talent for generations". He seems to have viewed Tuoba Gui and Tuoba Si as capable emperors (which they were, even if not in the late part of his reign for Tuoba Gui).
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