Tsung-yang
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 樅陽/枞阳 (Zōngyáng) Wade–Giles romanization: Tsung¹-yang².
Proper noun
Tsung-yang
- Alternative form of Zongyang
- 1975, Han-sheng Chuan; Richard A. Kraus, Mid-Ch'ing Rice Markets and Trade: An Essay in Price History (清中葉的米糧市場與貿易), Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 74-24937, OCLC 906155131, OL 5060700M, page 68:
- He lists three major transshipment points for Hukwang and Kiangsi rice. One of these is Yün-ts’ao, which is not on the Yangtze river but considerably north of it, not on any natural route from upriver to Kiangsu. Consequently, it hardly would have been able to compete with Wu-hu and Tsung-yang for upriver rice trade.
- 1994 [145-86 B.C.], Ssu-ma Chʻien, William Nienhauser, editor, The Grand Scribe's Records, volume II, Indiana University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 94-18408, OCLC 470507975, page 250:
- Tsung-yang County was located near modern Tsung-yang County in Anhwei Province (Wang Li-ch'i, […]
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Translations
Zongyang — see Zongyang