Kinsha
English
Etymology
From the Nanjing-dialect (later Postal Romanization) romanization of Mandarin 金沙 (Jīnshā).
Proper noun
Kinsha
- Alternative form of Jinsha (River in China)
- 1933 December 2, “Tibetan Troops Renew Attack on Sikong”, in The China Weekly Review, volume 67, number 1, OCLC 52770868, page 32, column 2:
- Szechuen troops defending recognized Chinese territory against the raids of the Tibetans declare that by crossing the Kinsha River the forces of the Da Lai Lama have violated the recent truce. The truce established the stream as the boundary between Tibet and China Proper.
- 1972, Whitehead, G. Kenneth, “The Deer of Europe and Northern Asia”, in Deer of the world, →ISBN, OCLC 553934, pages 84-85:
- The southern limit of the Roe deer in China seems to be about latitude 30°N but in Sikang and Szechwan provinces it may extend slightly south of this latitude in the Kinsha River area.
- 1993, “Translator's Notes”, in Joseph R. Allen, transl., Forbidden Games & Video Poems: The Poetry of Yang Mu and Lo Chʻing, University of Washington Press, →ISBN, OCLC 246818235, page 399:
- Mount O-mei is on the upper reaches of the Yangtze and is a famous site for Buddhist pilgrimages. The Kinsha is the source river for the Yangtze.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Kinsha.
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- Alternative form of Jinsha (Kinmen, Taiwan)
- 1980 January, 光華 [Sinorama], volume 5, number 1-6, Government Information Office, ISSN 0256-9043, OCLC 20549278, page 11; republished as Kinmen: A Defiant Outpost for Free China, 1980, archived from the original on 21 October 2022, 島嶼行旅:
- Lee Hsi-chi, a native of Kinmen, is one of the pioneers in Taiwan's modern art movement. He was pleased to hear that the Kinmen County Government was planning to rebuild 18 ancient houses in Shanhou near Kinsha Town to form a folk village. […]
The Kinmen County Government has invited specialists to collect all records related to the style of traditional architecture to transform the block of houses in Shanhou near Kinsha Town into a museum.
- 1992, COA General Report, number 7, Council of Agriculture, OCLC 32833482, page 144, column 1:
- The COA undertook reclamation of 110 hectares of land in the Wukang district of Kinsha Township in Kinmen County, building or repairing four hundred meters of stone irrigation ditch , three culverts , and 2,535 square meters of mud […]
- 1997, Summary of World Broadcasts Asia, Pacific, number 2832-2843, British Broadcasting Corporation, OCLC 28685680, page 8, column 2:
- Earlier in the day, Li also paid a visit to the Kinsha Township Administration Office, the newly inaugurated Kinmen Forest Park and toured a plot of land earmarked for a new desalinization plant.
- 2003 June, Yang, Tien-Hou (楊天厚), “金門城隍信仰研究 [The Research on the Faith in Cheng Hwang Yeh in Kinmen]”, in 國立中山大學中國文學研究所碩士論文 [National Sun Yat-sen University], OCLC 910948878, archived from the original on 24 October 2022, Abstract, page 7:
- In 1392, Ming Dynasty built five military spots for coast safety. The five military spots were located in Tianpu village in Kinsha town, Fengshang village and Chengkun village in Kinhu town, and Liehyu Hsiang.
- 2008 September 13, “Kinmen locals call for ban on sky lanterns”, in Taipei Times, ISSN 1563-9525, OCLC 464696902, archived from the original on 13 September 2008, Taiwan News, page 4:
- Since a sky lantern activity was held that night by the nearby Kinsha Township (金沙) office on the northern coastal area as a celebration for the upcoming Mid-Autumn Festival — one of the major traditional festivals in Taiwan — local residents suspected sky lanterns were the cause of the fire.
The Mid-Autumn Festival falls tomorrow.
Kinsha Township chief Chen Kun-ti (陳昆第) admitted that sky lanterns, which are lit and released into the sky, were the most likely culprit.
- 2008 October 1, “少小離家 新加坡金門會館主席黃祖耀榮歸故里 [Chu-Yao Huang, Chairman of Kim Mui Hoey Kuan returns home]”, in Ting-Yi Shih, transl., Overseas Community Affairs Council, Republic of China (Taiwan), archived from the original on 25 October 2022, English News:
- Chu-Yao Huang of Singapore is the chairman of Kim Mui Hoey Kuan (Kinmen Association of Singapore). Seventy years after leaving his hometown of Kinmen, he returned with his wife. Upon their arrival on March 26th, the chairman not only participated in forum discussions at Kinmen University, he also made a trip to the town of Kinsha to pay respect to his ancestors.
- 2021, Shih, Chien-Ming; Pei-Wen Yang; Li-Lian Chao, “Molecular Detection and Genetic Identification of Rickettsia Infection in Ixodes granulatus Ticks, an Incriminated Vector for Geographical Transmission in Taiwan”, in Microorganisms, volume 9, number 6, DOI: , ISSN 2076-2607, OCLC 870683254, pages 2, 5:
- The collection sites in four townships of Kinmen Island include Kinhu (24°41' N, 118°43' E; 24°43' N, 118°46' E), Kinsha (24°52' N, 118°41' E; 24°50' N, 118°44' E), Kinning (24°45' N, 118°37' E) and Kincheng (24°40' N, 118°31' E) (Figure 1). […]
The geographical prevalence of Rickettsia infection was detected only in Kinhu (7.21%) and Kinsha (3.92%) townships (Table 2).
- 2022, Huang, Shyh-Shyun; et al., “An Ethnobotanical Study of Medicinal Plants in Kinmen”, in Frontiers in Pharmacology, DOI: , ISSN 1663-9812, OCLC 708333116:
- The research area for this study was the Kinmen area (Figure 2), and the villages and towns that were included spanned Jincheng Town, Kinhu Town, Kinsha Town, Jinning Township, and Lieyu Township, which comprise the main population in Kinmen. […]
Prior to the interviews, all of the respondents provided informed consent and signed a consent form. The respondents were from Jincheng Town (16.63% female), Kinhu Town (22.59% female), Kinsha Town (19.58% female), Jinning Township (15.33% female), and Lieyu Township (8.75% female).
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Kinsha.
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See also
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