Mao-ming
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Mandarin 茂名 (Màomíng), Wade-Giles romanization: Mao⁴-ming².
Proper noun
[edit]- Alternative form of Maoming
- 1925, “Mr. Yang Yung-tai 楊永泰字暢卿”, in M. C. Powell, editor, Who's Who in China 中國名人錄[1], 3rd edition, Shanghai: China Weekly Review, page 914:
- Mr. Yang Yung-t'ai was born at Mao-ming Hsien, Kuangtung province, in 1880.
- 1969, Ezra Vogel, Canton under Communism: Programs and Politics in a Provincial Capital 1949-1968[2], Harvard University Press, page 238:
- Deposits of oil were being opened near Mao-ming in western Kwangtung, and a railroad was built linking Mao-ming first to Canton¹²⁰ and later to Chan-chiang.
- 1978, William L. Parish, Martin King Whyte, Village and Family in Contemporary China[4], University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 20:
- The only other major railroad in Kwangtung (completed in the 1950s) links the far western port of Chan-chiang and the shale-oil-producing city of Mao-ming to Kwangsi Province.
Translations
[edit]Maoming — see Maoming