Difference between revisions of "User:Hz48"

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So, my first name-Helen-is basically a given. I haven't ever had someone mispronounce it (In case someone does, however, it's pronounced "HEH-len"). I have had some friends try to abbreviate it, though, but I think it's pretty obvious why that doesn't work. My last name, the way all Chinese people pronounce it, is like the name "John" without the "n" at the end.
 
So, my first name-Helen-is basically a given. I haven't ever had someone mispronounce it (In case someone does, however, it's pronounced "HEH-len"). I have had some friends try to abbreviate it, though, but I think it's pretty obvious why that doesn't work. My last name, the way all Chinese people pronounce it, is like the name "John" without the "n" at the end.
As for the phonetic pronunciation, the IPA version of my name, Helen Zhang, is /ˈhələn dʒaŋ/.
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The IPA version of my name, Helen Zhang, is /ˈhələn dʒaŋ/.
  
 
== Link to a Grand Challenge for Engineering ==
 
== Link to a Grand Challenge for Engineering ==

Revision as of 22:26, 14 September 2010

About Me

My hometown is Brentwood, Tennessee, and I graduated from Brentwood High School. In my free time, I love to read (anything from classics like Jane Eyre to modern sci-fi/fantasy like Lord of the Rings), sketch or paint (my favorite subjects are people), watch/read anime/manga, or play badminton (though I'm definitely in need of practice!).

I'm an American-Born-Chinese, and I visit my grandparents in Beijing, China every other summer.

I'm currently a freshman at Duke University (Pratt) and I live in Brown Dorm.


Name Pronunciation

So, my first name-Helen-is basically a given. I haven't ever had someone mispronounce it (In case someone does, however, it's pronounced "HEH-len"). I have had some friends try to abbreviate it, though, but I think it's pretty obvious why that doesn't work. My last name, the way all Chinese people pronounce it, is like the name "John" without the "n" at the end. The IPA version of my name, Helen Zhang, is /ˈhələn dʒaŋ/.

Link to a Grand Challenge for Engineering

Fusion Power:Will It Ever Come?, William E. Parkins, Science Magazine, 10 March 2006, Accessed 12 September 2010 (Grand Challenge)


Favorite MATLAB Demonstration