Proper noun
(historical) An ancient Chinese march during the Zhou dynasty
(historical) Liang, the realm of the earlier march after its elevation to a kingdom
(historical) A kingdom during the Three Kingdoms interregnum following China's Han dynasty.
Wei
(historical) An ancient Chinese duchy during the Zhou dynasty
Wei
A river in China, a tributary of the Yellow River.
Synonym: Wei River
General Wei Qing's victory was only a thing of chance. And General Li Guang's thwarted effort was his fate, not his fault. Wang Wei
After a lengthy, unusual pause, Wei responds that he must discuss Ryan's claims with Su, providing exact details of when and where Su will be travelling to address the politburo in regards to the war effort. Source: Internet
After achieving the throughput much higher than a T1s, Wei Xu finally made the commercial product practically feasible, that was released as a part of the well-known Gauntlet firewall. Source: Internet
After defeating the Later Qin army in several battles, as well as an army of Northern Wei troops which had crossed to assist the Later Qin, Liu Yu recaptured the vital cities of Chang'an and Luoyang, the former capitals of the Jin Empire. Source: Internet
After attempting to negotiate peace and receiving no positive response from Liu Bei, fearing attack on both sides, Sun Quan became a vassal of Wei. Source: Internet
After Zhuge Liang's death, attacks on the southern Huai River region intensified but nonetheless, Wei could not break through the line of the river defenses erected by Wu, which included the Ruxu fortress. Source: Internet