Lo-t'ien
English
![](Images/wiktionary/Txu-oclc-6654394-nh-50-5th-ed.jpg.webp)
Map including LO-T'IEN (AMS, 1961)
Etymology
From Mandarin 羅田/罗田 (Luótián), Wade–Giles romanization: Lo²-t'ien².
Proper noun
Lo-t'ien
- Alternative form of Luotian
- 1901, J. J. M. de Groot, The Religious System of China, volume IV, OCLC 82569184, page 92:
- Yuh ying kia pi 育嬰家祕, "Domestic Mysteries regarding the Rearing of Children", a work by Wan Ts'üen 萬全, alias Mih-chai 密齋, a native of Lo-t'ien 羅田 in the extreme east of Hupeh, who lived under the Ming dynasty.
- 1972, Mackerras, Colin P., The Rise of the Peking Opera 1770-1870, Oxford: Clarendon Press, OCLC 760412787, OL 5450393M, page 184:
- Yü San-sheng came from Lo-t’ien in Hupeh, and was the son of a merchant.
- 1986, Patricia Buckley Ebrey, James L. Watson, editor, Kinship Organization in Late Imperial China 1000-1940, University of California Press, →ISBN, LCCN 85-1139, OCLC 963492167, page 51:
- Wu Hai, whose objections to contamination of the patrilineal line were cited above, described an ancestral hall (tz'u-t'ang) of the Lins of Lo-t'ien (Hupei).
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Translations
Luotian — see Luotian
Anagrams
- entoil, lionet, lone it