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Heng Guan Garden
Heng may refer to: Name * Heng (surname), a surname from Southeast Asia * HENG abbreviation from "Hydrogen Enriched Natural Gas", see hydrogen compressed natural gas * Heng, one of deities Heng and Ha Letters * Heng (letter), an uncommon letter of the Latin alphabet combining and the lower right hook from * Heng (stroke), the horizontal stroke used in writing Chinese characters Places * Heng (Rogaland), an island in Strand municipality, Rogaland county, Norway * Heng County, in Guangxi, China * Mount Heng (Hunan), mount in Hunan, China * Mount Heng (Shanxi), mount in Shanxi, China {{dab, geo ...
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Heng (surname)
As a surname, Heng may refer to: * Teochew romanization of the Chinese surname written ('' Wáng'' in Hanyu Pinyin) * Hokkien romanization of the Chinese surname written ('' Xíng'' in Hanyu Pinyin) * pinyin romanization of the less-common Chinese surname written in traditional characters or in simplified characters (also ''Héng'') Distribution Heng is mostly identified as a Teochew-romanized Chinese surname written ('' Wáng'' in Hanyu Pinyin Hanyu Pinyin (), often shortened to just pinyin, is the official romanization system for Standard Mandarin Chinese in China, and to some extent, in Singapore and Malaysia. It is often used to teach Mandarin, normally written in Chinese for ...) in Singapore and Malaysia. The Chinese surname was listed 8th on the famous Song Dynasty list of the ''Hundred Family Surnames'' and is the list of common Chinese surnames, most common surname in mainland China.
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HCNG
HCNG or H2CNG (hydrogen compressed natural gas) is a mixture of compressed natural gas and 4–9 percent hydrogen by energy. It may be used as a fuel gas for internal combustion engines and home appliances. (regarding the acronyms in the above emissions chart: AVL = Average Levels? CNG = Compressed Natural Gas HCNG = Hydrogen and CNG blend NOX = Nitrogen Oxides NMHC = Non-Methane Hydrocarbons? CH4 = Methane THC = Total Hydrocarbons? CO = Carbon Monoxide) HCNG dispensers can be found at Hynor (Norway) Thousand palms and Barstow, California, Fort Collins, Colorado (all US), Chongqing and Shanxi (China), Pico Truncado (Argentina), Islamabad (Pakistan), Dunkerque (France), Gothenburg Sweden, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Emilia-Romagna, Lombardia (Italy), Dwarka and Faridabad (Delhi), India and the BC hydrogen highway in Canada. HCNG for mobile use is premixed at the hydrogen station. Research In the town of Nes on the island of Ameland in the Netherlands, a four-year (2008-2011) fie ...
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Heng And Ha
Heng and Ha () are two generals of the Shang dynasty in Chinese mythology, featured within the 16th-century Chinese fantasy novel ''Investiture of the Gods''. These two fictional characters were created by the author of ''Investiture of the Gods'' based upon the vajra warriors, two guards of Buddhist temples in East Asia, and have become their common names in Chinese. Novel In the ''Investiture of the Gods'', the Heng () or Hengjiang () is named Zheng Lun () and the Ha () or Hajiang () is named Chen Qi (), both are officials of guarding the grain in the Shang dynasty. Finally, Jiang Ziya canonized and added them to ''Feng Shen Bangs list (). Buddhism In Chinese Buddhism, Heng and Ha are the common names of the '' jingang lishi'', two guards of Buddhist temples. They are usually placed on both sides of the Shanmen. They hold vajras (short metal weapon that has the symbolic nature of a diamond), namely "Narayana" (Buddha's warrior attendant) or "Yaksha Deity" () or "Zhi Jin Gang" ...
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Heng (letter)
Heng is a letter of the Latin alphabet, originating as a typographic ligature of '' h'' and '' ŋ''. It is used for a voiceless ''y''-like sound, such as in Dania transcription of the Danish language. It was used word-finally in early transcriptions of Mayan languages, where it may have represented a uvular fricative. It is sometimes used to write Judeo-Tat. It has been occasionally used by phonologists to represent a hypothetical phoneme in English, which includes both and as its allophones, to illustrate the limited usefulness of minimal pairs to distinguish phonemes. Normally and are considered separate phonemes in English, even though a minimal pair for them cannot be constructed, due to their complementary distribution. It is also used in Bantu linguistics to indicate a voiced alveolar lateral fricative (). Both and are encoded in Unicode block Latin Extended-D; they were added with Unicode version 5.1 in April 2008. Transcription A variant form, , is encoded as p ...
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Heng (stroke)
Radical 1 or radical one () meaning "1, one" is one of the 6 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 1 stroke (CJK character), stroke. In the ''Kangxi Dictionary'', there are 42 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this Radical (Chinese characters), radical. is also the 1st indexing component in the ''Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components'' predominantly adopted by Simplified Chinese characters, Simplified Chinese dictionaries published in mainland China. Evolution File:一-bigseal.svg, Large seal script character File:一-seal.svg, Small seal script character Derived characters In calligraphy The only stroke in radical one, known as ''héng'' "horizontal", is called ''cè'' in the Eight Principles of Yong, eight principles of the character 永 ( ''Yǒngzì Bāfǎ'') which are the basis of Chinese calligraphy. References * Literature * * Notes See also

*Chinese numerals {{Simplified Chinese radicals Kangxi radicals, 001 Sim ...
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Heng (Rogaland)
Heng is a small island in the Strand municipality of Rogaland, Norway. The island lies in the Idsefjorden, about southwest of the village of Tau on the mainland. Heng lies roughly halfway between the islands of Hidle and Idse. See also *List of islands of Norway This is a list of islands of Norway sorted by name. For a list sorted by area, see List of islands of Norway by area. A * Alden * Aldra * Algrøy * Alsta * Altra * Anda * Andabeløya * Andørja * Andøya, Vesterålen * Andøya, Agder * Ar ... References Islands of Rogaland Strand, Norway {{Rogaland-geo-stub ...
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Heng County
Hengzhou (), formerly, Heng County or Hengxian (; Standard Zhuang: ) is a county-level city of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, it is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Nanning, the capital of Guangxi, with a permanent population of 863,001 and a hukou population of 1,200,521 as of the 2010 Census. The easternmost county-level division of Nanning City, it borders the prefecture-level cities of Guigang to the northeast, Yulin to the east, and Qinzhou to the south. 60% speak Pinghua as there mother tongue and a further 30% speak Pingua as a second language. The county-level city was approved and elevated by the former ''Heng County'' by the State Council on February 3, 2021. Administrative divisions There are 14 towns and 3 townships in the county-level city: Towns: *Hengzhou (横州镇), Luancheng (峦城镇), Liujing (六景镇), Shitang (石塘镇), Taoxu (陶圩镇), Xiaoyi (校椅镇), Yunbiao (云表镇), Baihe (百合镇), Nayang (那阳 ...
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Mount Heng (Hunan)
Hengshan (), also known as Mount Heng, is a mountain in southcentral China's Hunan Province known as the southern mountain () of the Five Great Mountains of China. Heng Shan is a mountain range long with 72 peaks and lies at . The Huiyan Peak is the south end of the peaks, Yuelu Mountain in Changsha City is the north end, and the Zhurong Peak is the highest at above sea level. At the foot of the mountain stands the largest temple in southern China, the Grand Temple of Mount Heng (Nanyue Damiao), which is the largest group of ancient buildings in Hunan Province. Other notable sites in the area include Shangfeng Temple, Fuyan Temple, Zhusheng Temple Zhusheng Temple () * Zhusheng Temple (Hunan), in Hengshan, Hunan, China * Zhusheng Temple (Yunnan), Binchuan County, Yunnan, China Buddhist temple disambiguation pages {{Disambiguation ... (8th-century Buddhist monastery) and Zhurong Gong, a small stone temple. Climate References Further reading * * {{Aut ...
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