Teng-feng
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 登封 (Dēngfēng), Wade-Giles romanization: Têng¹-fêng¹.
Proper noun
Teng-feng
- Alternative form of Dengfeng
- [1911, Laufer, Berthold, Chinese Grave-Sculptures of the Han Period, OCLC 26067992, page 2:
- It is due to the efforts of CHAVANNES that the illustrations of the pillars belonging to the sepulchre of Wu are now made accessible, in his monumental work "Mission archéologique dans la Chine septentrionale" (two volumes, Paris, 1909); he has discovered further three other pairs of similar pillars in the district of Têng-fêng in Honan Province, dated A.D. 118, 123, and the third probably 123, respectively.]
- [1919, John C. Ferguson, Outlines of Chinese Art, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, OCLC 877423366, OL 7039681M, page 87:
- There are also five stones on the famous Sung Mountain in Têng-fêng, Ho-nan province, which I have had no opportunity to examine either by visiting the site or by seeing rubbings.]
- 1988, Yates, Robin D. S., “Selected Translations”, in Washing Silk: The Life and Selected Poetry of Wei Chuang (834?-910), Harvard University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 87-29642, OCLC 924980345, OL 2399586M, page 100:
- Ying-yang county lies 70 li southwest of the modern Teng-feng county, Honan.
-
Translations
Dengfeng — see Dengfeng