Lung-yen
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 龍巖/龙岩 (Lóngyán), Wade–Giles romanization: Lung²-yen².[1]
Proper noun
Lung-yen
- Alternative form of Longyan
- 1974, Lloyd E. Eastman, The Abortive Revolution, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 74-75639, OCLC 780473681, page 99:
- After the Nineteenth Route Army had recovered the area around Lung-yen in western Fukien from the communists in October 1932, Hsü took the initiative in establishing the Reconstruction Council.
- 1977, Hsi, Angela N. S., “Socialist Reform and the Fukien Rebellion 1932—34”, in Journal of Asian History, volume 11, number 1, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, ISSN 0021-910X, OCLC 855624815, page 7:
- In October the army captured eight counties in western Fukien and established a “Committee on the Rehabilitation of Western Fukien” (Min-hsi shan-hou wei-yuan-hui) at Lung-yen.
-
Translations
Longyan — see Longyan
References
- Longyan, Wade-Giles romanization Lung-yen, in Encyclopædia Britannica