Crossword clues for tange
Wikipedia
Tange may refer to:
People:
- Arthur Tange (1914–2001), Australian senior public servant
- Jun Watanabe Tange or Watanabe Jun (born 1954), Japanese architect, former professor at Chubu University
- Kenzo Tange (1913–2005), Japanese architect, winner of the 1987 Pritzker Prize for architecture
- Klaus Tange (born 1962), Danish actor in theatre, film, and television
- Sakura Tange (born 1973), Japanese idol, voice actress and singer
- Tange Sazen, fictional swordsman from Japanese literature and cinema
Geography:
- Tange Bolaghi or Tangeh Bolaghi, archaeologically significant valley in Iran with 130 ancient settlements
- Tange Promontory, ice-covered peninsula just west of Casey Bay on the coast of Enderby Land
Other:
- Tange International Co., manufacturer of bicycle frame tubing
Usage examples of "tange".
Duff, a New Zealand anthropologist who has made a special study of adze distributions, claiming that no adzes with butts tanged as an aid in lashing the handles have been established for Western Polynesia, whereas tanged adzes have been found throughout Eastern Polynesia, has argued that this is not in accord with what one would expect from random voyaging.
Obviously, therefore, there must have been some explanation for the absence of tanged adzes from Western Polynesia other than that random voyages did not occur.
Apparently handfuls of migrants from Eastern Polynesia failed to establish the tanging of adzes among the conservative Western Polynesians.
A number of archaeologists have concluded that the tanging of adzes was brought to Polynesia by migrants from the west, although tanging is not typical of Western Polynesian, Melanesian or Micronesian adzes.
Perhaps the best view of all, however, is that after the early settlers of Eastern Polynesia were released from the conservative influence of Western Polynesian technology, they tanged some of their adzes and made other innovations in their artifacts.
Eastern Polynesia and Western Polynesia came separately to those areas from a common proto-Polynesian area, or that the Western Polynesians, before the Eastern Polynesians left Western Polynesia, practised the tanging of adzes.
The facts could be explained by the view that, after the Eastern Polynesians left Western Polynesia, some random migrants who had by-passed Western Polynesia introduced the art of tanging into Eastern Polynesia.
Tange Kenzo, who began winning prizes in architectural competitions during the war and later was for a time associated with Maekawa.