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Chen English

Meaning Chen meaning

What does Chen mean?

Chen

wild goose having white adult plumage

Synonyms Chen synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Chen?

Chen English » English

subgenus Chen

Examples Chen examples

How do I use Chen in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Chen is not a businessperson.
Chen is a teacher.
Chen is not American.
Chen is not Korean.

Movie subtitles

Hold her down, Chen!
OK, Chen. Lets haul it in.
OK, Chen. Now.
Put a canvas over it, Chen.
No! Take a look, Chen.
Chen. You come, too.
Chen Yungs folks live there.
We hear from son Chen you got trouble.
Hows Chen?
Chen very fine son.
Chen can take me in for a while.
Chen?
Chen Yung goes with it.
Head out to sea, Chen.
Chen, how's your mother?
Chen, how do you feel about all this?
Chen, show them.
You'll do it for me, won't you, Chen?
Well, Chen, how'd it go?
Chen, stand up.
Chen, what's the matter?
Chen. go to the power station and work it out with your friend.
This can wait, Chen.
You struck Chen, didn't you?
You lost your temper and struck Chen, and now you lecture me? Don't pull your humanism on me.
I struck Chen, and I regret it.
There's a problem. Chen won't help anymore.
Chen, take him to the medical ward.
Mr. Chen.
Mr. Chen Do I look like a liar?
Ah, but we may only get a report of what Mavic Chen said, not actually see him.
It's Mavic Chen on holiday.
Mavic Chen, you have failed in your task.
Mavic Chen, of incompetence!
Steven, hand the box over to Chen.
Contact Mavic Chen and ask for a report.
Now that would mean that Mavic Chen will know precisely where we are.
You couldn't question Chen and you wouldn't question Bret.
Mavic Chen, Guardian of the Solar System?
Chen - must be watched.
That's Mavic Chen's!
And then I will head back to Chen's spaceship.

News and current affairs

This Web site, now closed by the government, has also reported on the fate of Chen Guangcheng.
Hu and Chen clearly respect the law.
Perhaps Hu Jia and Chen Guancheng represent this silent billion more than the Party does.
There has been a great deal of speculation about the consequences of Bo's fall, and of the daring escape of the human-rights activist, Chen Guangcheng, after 18 months of house arrest.
Chen asked him to investigate abuses against him and his family.
That may be why Bo had to be toppled, and certainly why dissidents like Chen, as well as his family, have to suffer so much that refuge in a foreign embassy is their final, desperate option.
The purge of a former mayor of Beijing, Chen Xitong, and his cronies, also on charges of corruption, could not have happened without evidence gathered by official spies.
The incumbent, Chen Shui-bian, has initiated a referendum process that might someday be used to ask Taiwanese if they want to formalize today's de facto independence.
Taiwan's young democracy must now cope with the balancing act that President Chen Shui-bian's re-election has thrust upon it.
While canvassing for votes in his hometown in southern Taiwan on the eve of the election, President Chen and Vice President Annette Lu were both wounded by an assassin's bullet.
But while Chen's campaign to safeguard Taiwan against threats from mainland China clearly galvanized the party's supporters, it made the uncommitted nervous and the rival KMT angry.
President Chen upped the stakes even more by holding Taiwan's first-ever popular referendum.
President Chen agreed to a recount.
A pledge to protect human rights was written into the Chinese constitution in 2004; but, as the recent case of the blind dissident Chen Guangcheng illustrates, this is mostly a dead letter.
Li Wenshan and Chen Shiqing, leaders of the Chinese Nation's Democratic Party, which has nearly 1,000 members, are serving long sentences in Gansu Province's Linxia Prison.
There are now serious concerns that the so-called dark greens - the harder-line faction in Taiwan's pro-independence pan-green political camp - will seize this issue as a stick with which to beat President Chen.
In the absence of reliable statistics, let us focus on two iconic figures of China's pro-democracy movement: Hu Jia and Chen Guancheng.
As this extreme violence violates Chinese law, Chen petitioned the central government - the only legally recognized form of protest in China.
When carrying his petition to Beijing, escorted by a tiny group of lawyers, Chen was accused of disrupting traffic on the city's clogged roads and condemned to four years in jail.
The incarceration of Hu Jia and Chen Guangcheng is a clear signal that no democratization process will start in China outside of the Party's control.
Deng Xiaoping, at that time the paramount leader, and Chen Yun, another representative of the powerful Old Guard, were furious at this result.
So the arrest of Politburo member and Shanghai Communist Party boss Chen Liangyu on corruption charges has sent shock waves across the country.
Central authorities did not investigate the Linyi abuses until news of the harassment of Chen Guangcheng - and his abduction with the help of Beijing police - spread into international media.
As a volunteer for the network, I was in touch with Chen and followed events closely.
Chen was released from detention but remains under house arrest and was dragged back to the police station on September 2 for unknown reasons.
Police refuse to return Chen's personal computer and cell phone.
Meanwhile, through arrests, threats, and bribery, authorities are forcing villagers to withdraw accounts of abuse and back out of their lawsuits, warning of the dire consequences of cooperating with Chen and the lawyers.
Chen, a blind peasant and self-taught lawyer, had protested in 2005 against the kidnapping of some 3000 women in his hometown of Linyi.

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