mandarinate การใช้
- The mandarinate or official class was recruited from all ranks of the people by competitive examination.
- Phan was transferred to the Hu? court as a member of the censorate, a watchdog body that monitored the work of the mandarinate.
- In response, the Emperor elevated him to the highest grade of the mandarinate and granted permission for him to preach Christianity anywhere in the empire.
- He advanced rapidly through the ranks of the colonial mandarinate, partly thanks to his and his wife's family background in the Chinese officership.
- But, whether through lack of political will, or through passive resistance by a mandarinate which the report had suggested were " amateurs ", Fulton failed.
- He achieved this rank around 1780 . " He had bought a title and was raised to the third class of the mandarinate for his contributions to a military campaign.
- They therefore constitute a powerful worldwide business mandarinate _ little different in practice from the " ring-knockers " of West Point and Annapolis who for centuries have dominated the leadership of America's armed forces.
- Her husband, Liang Sicheng, was the son of one of China's most famous early political reformers, Liang Qichao, a man of what might be called the progressive mandarinate of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
- And despite widespread skepticism from the Washington legal mandarinate, many experts say it is not at all clear whether Ginsburg in the end will look like a publicity grubber who ill-served his client or an astute tactician who devised an unconventional strategy to extricate her from an extraordinarily perilous situation.
- The "'Ngh?-T ) nh Soviets "', or "'Ngh? T ) nh uprising "', was the series of uprisings, strikes and demonstrations by Vietnamese peasants, workers and intellectuals against the colonial French regime, the mandarinate and Vietnamese landlords, which occurred from 1930-1931.
- As in-house newsletter of the American Century, it's where George F . Kennan chose to announce the start of what soon came to be known as the Cold War, where Richard Nixon proposed an opening to China : where, generally, the US foreign policy mandarinate articulated the ways in which it expected the rest of the world to move and shake.