Lake Tai
English
Alternative forms
- Tai Lake
Etymology
Partial calque of Mandarin 太湖 (Tài Hú, “the Great Lake”).
Proper noun
Lake Tai
- a large freshwater lake west of Shanghai in eastern China
- 1801, John Walker, The Universal Gazetteer, 3rd edition, London, OCLC 1040962275, page :
- SOUTCHEOU, a city of the firſt rank, in the province of Kiangnan, in China, beautifully and agreeably ſituated on a river which communicates with the Lake Tai.
- 1939, Fei, Hsiao-tung (費孝通), Peasant Life in China (江村經濟), London: George Routledge and Sons, OCLC 823027574, OL 20963296M, pages 9-10:
- The village chosen for my investigation is called Kaihsienkung, locally pronounced kejiug’on. It is situated on the south-east bank of Lake Tai, in the lower course of the Yangtze River and about eighty miles west of Shanghai.
- 2020 July 15, Stanway, David, “Residents at China's giant lake unfazed as rainfall breaks records”, in Giles Elgood, editor, Reuters, archived from the original on 15 May 2022, Environment:
- At Lake Tai on the border of the wealthy coastal provinces of Jiangsu and Zhejiang, water levels hit 4.49 metres on Wednesday, 0.69 metres above the official warning level, according to government data. […]
Though still short of the 4.97-metre record set in 1999, Lake Tai is on the rise. Nearby Shanghai is already taking precautions, opening its sluice gates to discharge excess floodwaters.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Lake Tai.
-
Synonyms
- Lake Taihu
- Taihu Lake
Translations
lake
|
Further reading
- Lake Tai at OneLook Dictionary Search
- “Lake Tai” in TheFreeDictionary.com, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.: Farlex, Inc., 2003–2023.
Anagrams
- Tai Lake