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Published byWilfrid Robertson Modified over 9 years ago
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Countries & Culture
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Population: 4,164,252,000 (Source: 2010 United Nations) Area: 17,212,000 square miles Ranking: It is the largest and most populous continent Major Biomes: desert, grasslands, temperate forest, taiga Bordering Bodies of Water: Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean, Arctic Ocean, Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal, South China Sea, Yellow Sea, Bering Sea Major Rivers and Lakes: Caspian Sea, Lake Baikal, Aral Sea, Qinghai Lake, Yangtze River, Yellow River, Ganges River, Indus River Major Geographical Features: Himalayas, Ural Mountains, Kunlun Mountains, Arabian Desert, Gobi Desert, Takla Makan Desert, Thar Desert, Island of Japan, Mount Everest, Siberia
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According to OMB, “Asian” refers to a person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent, including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam. The Asian population includes people who indicated their race(s) as “Asian” or reported entries such as “Asian Indian,” “Chinese,” “Filipino,” “Korean,” “Japanese,” and “Vietnamese” or provided other detailed Asian responses.
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Asia contains around 30% of the world's land area and 60% of the world's population. The highest point on earth, Mt. Everest, is in Asia. The lowest point on land, the Dead Sea, is also in Asia. Asia is the only continent that shares borders with two other continents; Africa and Europe. It sometimes joins with a third continent, North America, in the winter by ice forming in the Bering Sea. Asia is home to two of the three largest economies in the world: China (2nd largest) and Japan (3rd largest). Russia and India are also top 10 world economies. Asia is home to many interesting animals including the giant panda, Asian elephant, tiger, Bactrian camel, komodo dragon, and the king cobra. China and India are the two largest countries in the world by population. China is number one with over 1.3 billion people. India is number two with over 1.2 billion. The third largest country in the world, the United States, only has just over 300 million people.
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Fairly simple on the surface Usually about agrarian imagery, courtship and marriage, or dynastic concerns Usually 4 syllables per line Organized around contrast Often relies on alliteration, repetition, and onomatopoeia
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1.Feng (folk-songs) 2.Minor Odes 3.Major Odes 4.Dynastic Songs
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A very handsome gentleman Waited for me in the lane; I am sorry I did not go with him. A very splendid gentleman Waited for me in the hall; I am sorry I did not keep company with him. I am wearing my unlined coat, my coat all of brocade I am wearing my unlined skirt, my skirt all of brocade! Oh uncles, young and old, Let me go with him to his home!
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Gone that emperor of Maoling, Rider through the autumn wind, Whose horse neighs at night And has passed without trace by dawn. The fragrance of autumn lingers still On those cassia trees by painted galleries, But on every palace hall the green moss grows. As Wei’s envoy sets out to drive a thousand li The keen wind at the East Gate stings the statue’s eyes… From the ruined palace he brings nothing forth But the moonshaped disk of Han, True to his lord, he sheds leaden tears, And withered orchids by the Xianyang Road See the traveler on his way. Ah, if Heaven had a feeling heart, it, too, must grow old! He bears the disk off alone By the light of the desolate moon, The town far behind him, muted its lapping waves.
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Haiku and Tanka
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Three lines Set syllables (5-7-5) Nature as the subject Kigo Kireji
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The snowy morning That Black Crow I hate so much… But he’s beautiful! ~Basho
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Five lines Defined syllables (5-7-5-7-7) Reflects ideas of culture and society Sometimes used as love letters Uses imagery
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On the white sand Of the beach of a small isle In the Eastern Seal, my face streaked with tears, Am playing with a crab – Ishikawa Takuboku [4] [4]
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Write one haiku and one tanka Place your haiku and tanka in Padlet (create new Padlet and title it Asian Literature) Email Padlet link – do not share, it does not work all of the time bchadwell@gcsd.k12.sc.us
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