Huai-an
See also: Huai'an
English
![](Images/wiktionary/Txu-oclc-6654394-ni-50-7th-ed.jpg.webp)
Map including Huai-an (DMA, 1975)
Etymology
From Mandarin 淮安 (Huái'ān) Wade–Giles romanization: Huai²-an¹.[1]
Proper noun
Huai-an
- Alternative form of Huai'an
- 1966, Chêng Tê-k'un (鄭徳坤), Prehistoric China (Archaeology in China), volume 1, OCLC 883261727, page 109:
- The site of Ch'ing-lien-kang in Huai-an, Kiangsu, furnishes a good example (17).
- 1973, Hin-cheung Lovell, “Sung and Yüan Monochrome Lacquers in the Freer Gallery”, in Ars Orientalis, volume 9, ISSN 0571-1371, JSTOR 4629274, OCLC 1125285280, page 122:
- There have been several instances of discovery of Sung lacquer reported in Chinese publications in the past two decades; the most substantial is undoubtedly from a group of five tombs at Yang-miao Chen 楊廟鎭, a town about four miles southwest of Huai-an 淮安 in Kiangsu province.
- 1976, K'ung, Shang-jen, The Peach Blossom Fan, New York Review Books, published 2015, →ISBN, LCCN 2014039704, OCLC 1198929390, page 90:
- Your Honours! The Governor General of Huai-an, His Excellency Shih K’o-fa, and the Military Governor of Feng-yang, His Excellency Ma Shih- ying, have both arrived.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Huai-an.
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Translations
Huai'an — see Huai'an
References
- Huai'an, Wade-Giles romanization Huai-an, in Encyclopædia Britannica