Ning-te
English

Map including NING-TE (NINGTEH) (AMS, 1954)
Etymology
From Mandarin 寧德/宁德 (Níngdé) Wade-Giles romanization: Ning²-tê².
Proper noun
Ning-te
- Alternative form of Ningde
- 1747, A New General Collection of Voyages and Travels, volume IV, London: Thomas Astley, OCLC 2045114, page 34:
- NOT far from Kyen-ning is Fu-ning chew ᵈ, a City of the ſecond Rank, remarkable for having Juriſdiction over two Cities of the third Order, viz. Fu-ngan hyen and Ning-te hyen. The Country where they are ſituated is of vaſt Extent, but over-run with Mountains; thoſe to the North of difficult Aſcent.
- 1970 [1968], Shiba Yoshinobu, Mark Elvin, transl., Commerce and Society in Sung China, published 1992, →ISBN, OCLC 1181343913, page 97:
- In Fukien there was a brisk circulation of the woods needed for building ships. Timber from the counties of Lo-yuan, Ning-te and Lien-chang[sic – meaning Lien-chiang] was made into rafts and sailed for North and South along the coasts.
- 1974, Carlson, Ellsworth C., The Foochow Missionaries, 1847-1880, Harvard University Press, →ISBN, LCCN 72-97832, OCLC 1142126, OL 5313093M, page 101:
- Wolfe pointed out that in the outstations the big gains were in the villages and smaller towns. To make the point, he took the example of Ning-te, remarking that the city "itself presents very little encouragement. The city congregation is composed solely of converts from the surrounding villages."
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Translations
Ningde — see Ningde
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