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The cast of Yezi - 2010 includes: Sabine Bail as Feuille Hongwu Chen as Aran Youxin Yang as Meihua

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What are the release dates for Yezi - 2010?

Yezi - 2010 was released on: USA: 19 July 2010 (DVD premiere)


What has the author Yezi written?

Zhenyi. Li has written: 'Cultural impact on international branding' -- subject(s): Attitudes, Brand choice, Cellular telephones, Consumers, Consumers' preferences, Export marketing, Intercultural communication, Marketing, Research 'Zhongguo di min su'


What movie and television projects has Sabine Bail been in?

Sabine Bail has: Played Nadine in "Nadine" in 1994. Played Purple Rose in "Hong mei gui bai mei gui" in 1994. Played Various characters in "Jamais au grand jamais" in 1996. Played Sabine - amie du Baron in "For Ever Mozart" in 1996. Performed in "Bas de plafond" in 1997. Played Voisine 1 in "Baby Blues" in 1998. Played Mme Ebouaney in "Louise (Take 2)" in 1998. Played Patricia in "Les parasites" in 1999. Performed in "Le voyage en Inde" in 2004. Played Leaf in "Feuille" in 2004. Played Feuille in "Yezi" in 2010. Played Rosa in "Corps diplomatique" in 2011.


What actors and actresses appeared in Gu ling jie shao nian sha ren shi jian - 1991?

The cast of Gu ling jie shao nian sha ren shi jian - 1991 includes: Yiqing Cai as Headlights (Liangguang) Yiwen Cao as Guitarist Jinling Cao as Mrs. Chen Xishen Chen as Blind, Fighter pilot Liangyue Chen as Chauffeur Taisong Chen as Gang Member Yiwen Chen as Horsecart (Mache) Laifu Chen as Policeman Lihua Chen as Reverend Chen Hongyu Chen as Sly (Huatou) Wong Chi Zan as Cat (Wang Mao) Hou De Jian as The Detective Zhongzhang Duan as Juvenile Division Cop Zhongqi Duan as Mr. Chen Danny Dunn as The Film Director Guoqiang Feng as Piggy Yangye Fu as Cushion (Kexing) Miaohui Gao as The Producer Changru Guo as The Key Grip Shen Hang as Threads (Yezi) Qingxiang He as Animal (Mao Shou) Jiaxian He as Gang Member Ai Hsiao as Ice-cream Parlour Lady Ming Hsu as Wang Xiangping Hu as Military Advisor Shujuan Huang as Girl Vendor Hung Hung as Chinese Studies Teacher Weihua Jiang as Librarian Elaine Jin as Mother Lawrence Ko as Airplane (Ji Fei) Fanyun Lai as Youngest Sister Minghzi Li as Gang Member Mingxun Li as Gang Member Qingfu Li as Headmaster (Shiye) Zhiqiang Li as Prisoner Minnan Li as Workman Xiaowei Liao as Gang Member Chen Limei as Clinic Nurse Yuchen Lin as Gang Member Zhengqing Lin as Gang Member Renjie Lin as Grapefruit (Wendan) Hongming Lin as Honey Hengzheng Lin as The Male Lead Yuan Ling as Keyboards Mingzheng Liu as Bass-player Qingqi Liu as Hefty (Da Ge) Changhao Liu as Juvenile Division Officer Liangzou Liu as Mouth Qiuyun Lu as Mrs. Fang Tingni Ma as Mathematics Teacher Qiliang Meng as Assistant Dean of Conduct Dehai Qu as Cowboy (Xibu) Junlong Rong as Sex Bomb (Zhang Bowen) Hongshen Shen as Dean of Conduct Mingyang Shi as Doctor Peiming Shi as Kid Brother (Xiao Di) Yihua Shi as The Assistant Director Mingyu Shi as The Temperamental Star Guozhi Shu as The Cameraman Baogui Sun as Librarian Zhigang Tan as Ma Zhijian Tang as Gang Member Xiaocui Tang as Jade (Xiao Cui) Xiangju Tang as Policeman Yeming Wang as Baldie (Guangtou) Zongzheng Wang as Deuce Chuan Wang as Eldest Sister Daonan Wang as Interrogator Weiming Wang as Ka Wu Yu Weiyan Yang as Interrogator Zhuang Wu as Officer Leqing Wu as Officer Hongjun Xie as Juvenile Division Cop Xianliang Xu as Gang Member Liping Yang as Lover in Park Lisa Yang as Ming (Liu Zhiming) Tianxiang Yang as Worm (Qiuying) Yulong Ying as Diaper Bo Yuan as Piano player Mingxin Zhang as Underpants (Mingxin) Zihong Zheng as Gang Member Kangnian Zheng as Gang Member Yuancheng Zheng as Morphine (Mafei) Jianxiong Zheng as Wu Ba Yicheng Zhong as Gang Member Huiling Zhou as Lover in Park Huiguo Zhou as Tiger (Xiao Hu) Ming Zhuo as Uncle Fat (Grocer)


When where playing cards invented?

Historians believe playing cards were invented in China where paper was invented as well. Some version of the standard English 52-card deck was later introduced into Europe via the Islamic empire. It was after this that the human figures of the court--kings, queens and their attendants--appeared on the cards. http://www.libraryspot.com/know/playingcards.htm The origin of playing cards is obscure, but it is almost certain that they began in China after the invention of paper. Ancient Chinese "money cards" have four "suits": coins (or cash), strings of coins (which may have been misinterpreted as sticks from crude drawings), myriads of strings, and tens of myriads. These were represented by ideograms, with numerals of 2-9 in the first three suits and numerals 1-9 in the "tens of myriads". Wilkinson suggests in The Chinese origin of playing cards that the first cards may have been actual paper currency which were both the tools of gaming and the stakes being played for. The designs on modern Mahjong tiles and dominoes likely evolved from those earliest playing cards. The Chinese word p�i is used to describe both paper cards and gaming tiles. An Indian origin for playing cards has been suggested by the resemblance of symbols on some early European decks to the ring, sword, cup, and baton classically depicted in the four hands of Indian statues. This is an area that still needs research. The time and manner of the introduction of cards into Europe are matters of dispute. The 38th canon of the council of Worcester (1240) is often quoted as evidence of cards having been known in England in the middle of the 13th century; but the games de rege et Regina there mentioned are now thought to more likely have been chess. If cards were generally known in Europe as early as 1278, it is very remarkable that Petrarch, in his dialogue that treats gaming, never once mentions them. Boccaccio, Chaucer and other writers of that time specifically refer to various games, but there is not a single passage in their works that can be fairly construed to refer to cards. Passages have been quoted from various works, of or relative to this period, but modern research leads to the supposition that the word rendered cards has often been mistranslated or interpolated.