Lo-ning
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 洛寧/洛宁 (Luòníng), Wade–Giles romanization: Lo⁴-ning².
Proper noun
Lo-ning
- Alternative form of Luoning
- 1968, Kwang-chih Chang, The Archaeology of Ancient China, Yale University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 68-24780, OCLC 308337, page 111:
- The most recently recognized, and perhaps the earliest phase of the Yang-shao culture in the Chung-yüan region, is a complex of artifacts first known from the Li-chia-ts'un site of Hsi-hsiang in Shensi, on the southern side of the Tsinling Mountains on the upper Hanshui River, and since identified in a series of sites north of Tsin-ling in the Weishui Valley even the Huangho Valley in Honan, including the lower strata at Pei-shou-ling in Pao-chi and Yüan-chün-miao in Hua Hsien, and the sites at Lao-kuan-t'ai in Hua Hsien and on the banks of River Lo near Lo-ning, western Honan.
- 1980, Papers on Far Eastern History, number 21-24, ISSN 0048-2870, OCLC 2265702, page 22:
- He also spent time lecturing in neighbouring counties, such as the free school in Lo-ning 洛寧, Honan, later known as the Lo-hsi shu-yüan 洛西書院 or ' Academy West of the [River] Lo.'
- 1984, Yang, Hsüan-chih, “Western Suburbs”, in Yi-t'ung Wang, transl., A Record of Buddhist Monasteries in Lo-yang, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, →ISBN, OCLC 364954279, page 182:
- The Yao Mountain is sixty li north of the modern Lo-ning hsien 洛寧縣, Honan.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Lo-ning.
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Translations
Luoning — see Luoning
Anagrams
- longin'