Bortala

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Mongolian ᠪᠣᠷᠣᠲᠠᠯ᠎ᠠ (borotal'a).

Proper noun

Bortala

  1. A Mongol autonomous prefecture in Xinjiang, China.
    • 1998, Linda Benson; Ingvar Svanberg, China's Last Nomads, M. E. Sharpe, →ISBN, LCCN 97-45582, OCLC 984366426, page 201:
      Overall, trade via the new ports of entry on the Xinjiang-Kazakstani border expanded tremendously in the first five years. Six of the new ports are by road: They include[...]The most important route, however, is the railway link that crosses the Chinese-Kazakstani border at Alataw (Ala Shankou), in the Bortala-Mongol Autonomous Prefecture.
    • 2015 December 24, Blanchard, Ben, “Minority report: Chinese official 'faked family's ethnicity'”, in Nick Macfie, editor, Reuters, archived from the original on 19 June 2022, World News:
      The ruling Communist Party’s graft-fighting Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said that Guo Xiangyi, who was a senior official in Xinjiang’s Bortala region, abused his power, took bribes and expropriated land.
      Guo, likely a Han Chinese judging by his name, also “faked and changed the ethnicity of his wife and child”, the statement said, without giving details.
      While the Uighurs, a Muslim people who speak a Turkic language, are the main minority in Xinjiang, Bortala is home to a large number of ethnic Mongols.

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