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      • By the late Zhou dynasty (4th to 3rd centuries BCE), wu referred mostly to female shamans or "sorceresses", while male sorcerers were named xi 覡 "male shaman; sorcerer", first attested in the Guoyu or Discourses of the States (4th century BCE).
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_(shaman)
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  3. 无锡 definition at Chinese.Yabla.com, a free online dictionary with English, Mandarin Chinese, Pinyin, Strokes & Audio. Look it up now!

  4. Look up Chinese, Pinyin or English, Show Examples and Help. This is a powerful Chinese-English dictionary. It lets you find words, hanzi, example sentences and more quickly and easily. Enter any Chinese text or English word in the search box and OMGChinese will search a myriad of data for you.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WuxiWuxi - Wikipedia

    Wuxi (Chinese: 无锡, WOO-shee) is a city in southern Jiangsu, China. As of the 2020 census, the city had a total population of 7,462,135 inhabitants. The city lies in the southern delta of the Yangtze and on Lake Tai.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wu_(shaman)Wu (shaman) - Wikipedia

    Wu (Chinese: 巫; pinyin: wū; Wade–Giles: wu) is a Chinese term translating to "shaman" or "sorcerer", originally the practitioners of Chinese shamanism or "Wuism" (巫教 wū jiào). Terminology. The glyph ancestral to modern 巫 is first recorded in bronze script, where it could refer to shamans or sorcerers of either sex.

  7. Meaning of 巫觋 in the Chinese dictionary with examples of use. Synonyms for 巫觋 and translation of 巫觋 to 25 languages.

  8. Online Chinese-English dictionary with native speaker sound for each Chinese character, word and example sentences.

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