Jump to content

Citations:Pingjhen

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English citations of Pingjhen

  • 2007 March 14, Riding the Apple Wave, “Riding the Apple Wave”, in CommonWealth Magazine[1], number 367, archived from the original on February 11, 2024, Technology‎[2]:
    Taoyuan County's Pingjhen City is not home to many thriving businesses. []
    Pingjhen City can no longer hold TXC Corp.'s expanding production lines, but Peter Lin is loath to leave the “not too prosperous” location, as he puts it.
  • 2008, Li-ling Huang, “Taipei — Post-industrial Globalisation”, in Gavin W. Jones, Mike Douglass, editors, Mega-Urban Regions in Pacific Asia: Urban Dynamics in a Global Era[3], Singapore: NUS Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 221–222:
    The core is Taipei Municipality and includes the 12 districts of Beitou, Shihlin, Neihu, Jhongshan, Wanhua, Songshan, Datong, Daan, Sinyi, Nangang, Wunshan, and Jhongjheng. All residents are classified as urban. The inner ring crosses the boundaries of three cities and counties. It covers the seven wards of Keelung City (Jhongshan, Jhongjheng, Sinyi, Renai, Anle, Nuannuan and Cidu), a few more urbanised townships within Taipei Prefecture (Danshuei, Sijhih, Shidian, Jhonghe, Yonghe, Banchiao, Tucheng, Shulin, Shingjhuang, Sanchong, Lujhou, Wugu, Taishan, and Yingge); Taoyuan City, Jhongli City, Gueishan, Bade, and Pingjhen townships of Taoyuan Prefecture.
  • 2008, L.-C. Lai, R.-N. Huang, W.-J. Wu, “Venom alkaloids of monogyne and polygyne forms of the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta, in Taiwan”, in Insectes Sociaux[4], volume 55, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on February 11, 2024, pages 444, 448:
    The monogyne colonies were collected from Linkou Township (Taipei County), Longtan, Sanchih and Sinwu Townships (Taoyuan County) whereas the polygyne colonies were collected from Sansia Township (Taipei County) and Bade, Longtan and Pingjhen Townships (Taoyuan County). []
    The C15:C15:1 ratio of polygyne colonies collected from Pingjhen is an exception and will be the focus for the future investigation.
  • 2013, Mawkae Hor, Tzusui Hung, Yingche Hung, Chengyuan Tang, “Application of Computational Geometry on Multi-region Electoral Districting”, in Proceedings of the 2013 International Conference on the Modern Development of Humanities and Social Science[5], →DOI, →ISSN, archived from the original on February 11, 2024, page 276, column 1:
    We also make a horizontal partition to Pingjhen town so that part of its villages will merge into the third indivisible region, shown in Figure 4.
  • 2021, Kun-Sung Liu, Hsiang-Chi Huang, “Estimation of Seismic Ground Motions and Attendant Potential Human Fatalities from a Scenario Earthquake on the Hsincheng Active Fault in Taohsin Area, Taiwan”, in Earth Sciences[6], volume 10, number 2, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on April 10, 2022, page 50, column 2:
    The Hukou fault, which is a reverse fault, direction of east-northeast, extending eastward from the Hukou, Hsinchu County to Pingjhen, Taoyuan County, with a length of 21 km. The aging result from the Hukou platform indicate that the Hukou fault may have been active at least 70,000 years ago, temporarily classified as active fault of category II [4].
  • 2022 June 23, Jason Pan, “Police officers suspected of bribery scheme”, in Taipei Times[7], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 22 June 2022, Taiwan News, page 2‎[8]:
    The officers under investigation are from New Taipei City’s Banciao (板橋) and Shulin (樹林) districts, Taoyuan’s Pingjhen (平鎮) and Bade (八德) districts, and Hsinchu County’s Jhubei City (竹北), they said.
  • (Can we date this quote?), “History”, in Jong Jen Elementary School[9], archived from the original on 05 March 2023[10]:
    As one of the oldest schools in Pingjhen District, Jong Jen Elementary School has undergone many changes:the founding of the school’s affiliated kindergarten in 1993;the renewal of school’s middle playground in 1990;and the construction of the immigration center in 2005; and the first prize of the sustainable campus in 2006.
  • 2023 March 28, “Roving baboon dies after its capture in Taoyuan”, in Taipei Times[11], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on March 27, 2023, Taiwan News, page 3‎[12]:
    A baboon yesterday died after being captured in Taoyuan due to wounds allegedly inflicted by a hunting rifle, Taoyuan authorities said.
    The animal had been spotted several times in the city’s Pingjhen District (平鎮) over the past 17 days. []
    Leofoo Village representatives said that the baboon had not escaped from the park, which is about 12km from Pingjhen District.