Kin-sha
See also: Kinsha
English
Etymology
From the Nanjing-dialect (later Postal Romanization) romanization of 金沙.
Proper noun
Kin-sha
- Alternative form of Jinsha (River in China)
- 1923, Kingdon-Ward, F., “Appendix”, in The Mystery Rivers of Tibet, London: Cadogan Books Ltd, published 1986, →ISBN, OCLC 816079737, page 309:
- It seems probable, from the work of Professor J. W. Gregory and others, that the Kin-sha — that portion of the upper Yangtze with which this book deals — formerly continued on its southward course and reached the Gulf of Tong-king.
- 1949, Chen, Han-seng, “The Kamba and their Relations with Central China”, in Frontier Land Systems in Southernmost China, Institute of Pacific Relations, LCCN 49-7806, OCLC 461032765, page 73:
- (1) At about the same time their number was 573,981 in the eastern half of Sikang Province, including nineteen districts east of the Kin-sha River; (2) and 321,945 in the western half.
- 1963, Gies, Joseph, “The Engineer Vanishes from Europe but Appears in Asia”, in Bridges and Men, Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, LCCN 63-18202, OCLC 133910434, page 22:
- In the eighth century, a Chinese suspension span over the Kin-sha River hung from iron chains, and similar bridges were built in Yunnan and in the mountains of Tibet.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Kin-sha.
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