Lin-ts'ang
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 臨滄/临沧 (Líncāng), Wade-Giles romanization: Lin²-tsʻang¹.
Proper noun
Lin-ts'ang
- Alternative form of Lincang
- 1961, Hsia, C. T., A History of Modern Chinese Fiction, 2nd edition, Yale University Press, published 1971, →ISBN, LCCN 60-13273, OCLC 755679413, OL 4446281M, page 340:
- The Lin-ts’ang Theatrical Troupe of West Yunnan regularly give performances in the evenings and chop wood in the hills in the day.
- 1983, Wanat Bhruksasri, Highlanders of Thailand, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, OCLC 10050956, page 227:
- There are approximately 270,000 Lahu living in Yunnan (Beijing Review, 1980: 17), mostly near the Burmese border in the districts of Ssu-mao and Lin-ts'ang.
-
Translations
Lincang — see Lincang
Anagrams
- antlings, slanting, tanlings