Tzekwei
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 秭歸/秭归 (Zǐguī).
Pronunciation
- enPR: dzûʹgwāʹ
Proper noun
Tzekwei
- Alternative form of Zigui
- 1928, Chinese Economic Journal, volume 2, Bureau of Foreign Trade, Ministry of Industry, OCLC 64228188, page 56:
- Tzekwei (秭歸) and Patung (巴東) produce about ten thousand tons.
- 1945, Journal of Paleontology, ISSN 0022-3360, OCLC 1754714, page 56:
- The same formation is shown farther east on the Yangtze at Tzekwei district (=Kweichow Fu) in western Hupeh and on the Taning-ho where it was named the Kweichow formation by Willis and Blackwelder.
- 1990, Frederic L. Holmes, “Li Siguang”, in Dictionary of Scientific Biography, volume 18, Charles Scribner's Sons, →ISBN, LCCN 80-27830, OCLC 7170246, page 553:
- During a vacation in 1923, Li and his assistant, Zhao Yazeng (Y. T. Chao), investigated the geology of the Yangtze Valley from Ichang to Tzekwei, which subsequent geologists have classified as belonging to the Paleozoic stratigraphy of central China.
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Translations
Zigui — see Zigui