Usage of the character 罕
hǎn
罕
[罕]
- rare
Sàihǎn
赛罕
[賽罕]
- Saihan District of Hohhot City 呼和浩特市 ( Hūhéhàotè Shì), Inner Mongolia
xīhan
希罕
[希罕]
- variant of 稀罕 (xīhan)
xīhan
稀罕
[稀罕]
- rare; uncommon
- rare thing; rarity
- to value as a rarity; to cherish
- Taiwan pr. (xihān)
hǎnyǒu
罕有
[罕有]
- to rarely have
- rare
nàhǎn
纳罕
[納罕]
- bewildered
- amazed
hǎnjiàn
罕见
[罕見]
- rare
- rarely seen
Gǔgēnhǎn
古根罕
[古根罕]
- Guggenheim (name)
Sàihǎn Qū
赛罕区
[賽罕區]
- Saihan District of Hohhot City 呼和浩特市 ( Hūhéhàotè Shì), Inner Mongolia
Jiālāhǎn
加拉罕
[加拉罕]
- Leo Karakhan (1889-1937), Soviet ambassador to China 1921-26, executed in Stalin's 1937 purge
Yīsīfǎhǎn
伊斯法罕
[伊斯法罕]
- Isfahan province and city in central Iran
Wǎhǎn Zǒuláng
瓦罕走廊
[瓦罕走廊]
- Wakhan Corridor, panhandle in the northeast of Afghanistan sharing a border with China at its eastern end
Yàbólāhǎn
亚伯拉罕
[亞伯拉罕]
- Abraham (name)
- Abraham, father of Judaism and Islam in the Bible and Quran
- same as Ibrahim 易卜拉辛
Sāmǎ'ěrhǎn
撒马尔罕
[撒馬爾罕]
- Samarkand, city in Uzbekistan
rénjìhǎnzhì
人迹罕至
[人跡罕至]
- lit. men's footprints are rare (idiom)
- fig. off the beaten track
- lonely
- deserted
Mùhǎnmòdé
穆罕默德
[穆罕默德]
- Mohammed (c. 570-632), central figure of Islam and prophet of God
Mòhǎndásī
莫罕达斯
[莫罕達斯]
- Mohandas (name)
Mòhǎnmòdé
默罕默德
[默罕默德]
- Mohammed (c. 570-632), central figure of Islam and prophet of God
- also written 穆罕默德
Lánggéhǎnshìdǎo
郎格罕氏岛
[郎格罕氏島]
- islets of Langerhans (medicine)
Xīn Hǎnbùshí'ěr
新罕布什尔
[新罕布什爾]
- New Hampshire, US state
Xīn Hǎnbùshí'ěrzhōu
新罕布什尔州
[新罕布什爾州]
- New Hampshire, US state
Mùhǎnmòdéliùshì
穆罕默德六世
[穆罕默德六世]
- King Mohammed VI (King of Morocco)
Mùhǎnmòdé· Oūmǎ
穆罕默德·欧玛
[穆罕默德·歐瑪]
- Mullah Mohammad Omar (c. 1960-2013), Taliban leader, Afghan head of state 1996-2001
Dá'ěrhǎn Màomíng'ānliánhéqí
达尔罕茂明安联合旗
[達爾罕茂明安聯合旗]
- Darhan Muming'an united banner in Baotou 包頭/包头 ( Bāotóu), Inner Mongolia
Gǔgēnhǎn Pēnqì Tuījìn Yánjiū Zhōngxīn
古根罕喷气推进研究中心
[古根罕噴氣推進研究中心]
- Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology (GALCIT, from 1926)
- Guggenheim Jet Propulsion Center (from 1943)