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Anyone who learns the skills of acupuncture or who extends his knowledge of TCM is inevitably confronted with terms which hitherto had always meant something different to him or her. Take the use of the word "wind", for example, to refer to a pathogenic factor contributing to illnesses - rather than its sense as a climatic factor.
This difficulty is compounded by the fact that, in most books, these terms are not used in a clear and uniform way. One of the many examples is the Chinese term "xu" which is translated as "insufficiency" but also as "deficiency" or "severity" and is often not even used consistently within one and the same publication.
This glossary presents all the Chinese terms (in Chinese characters and in Pinyin script) that are relevant to TCM and provides their English translations.
It also provides an explanation of how, for example, the location or the function of an acupuncture point can be concluded from its name.

Introduction
The Chinese language
II Glossary
1 Introduction
2 Philosophical basis of TCM
3 Theoretical basis of TCM
4 Diagnostic methods
5 Differential diagnosis in TCM
6 Therapeutic principles
7 Procedures of TCM
8 Acupuncture points
9 Special forms of acupuncture
10 Choosing acupuncture points, point combinations
and chronopuncture
11 Chinese drug therapy
12 Chinese dietetics
13 Diseases
Autores
ISBN
978-0-443-06872-0
EAN
9780443068720
Editor
Churchill Livingstone
Stock
NO
Idioma
Inglés
Nivel
Profesional
Formato
Encuadernado
Rústica
Páginas
408
Largo
-
Ancho
-
Peso
-
Edición
Fecha de edición
01-01-2011
Año de edición
2011
Nº de ediciones
1
Colección
-
Nº de colección
-