See also: Chinghai

English edit

Etymology edit

From Mandarin 青海靑海 (Qīnghǎi) Wade–Giles romanization: Chʻing¹-hai³.[1][2]

Proper noun edit

Ch'ing-hai

  1. Alternative form of Qinghai
    • 1904, Charles Daniel Tenney, Geography of Asia[2], London: Macmillan and Co., →OCLC, page 5:
      The Yellow River (黃河) rises in small lakes in the southern part of Ch'ing-hai (青海) and flows in a very crooked channel toward the north-east to Lan-chou Fu (蘭州府).
    • 1925, Francis Younghusband, Peking to Lhasa[3], London: Constable and Company, →OCLC, page 112:
      Leaving this town and the Sining River valley the road ascends a grassy valley with some recently started cultivation to a pass, 10,780 feet, over the Jih-yüeh Shan range, 27 miles from Tangar. This is the boundary between the Kansu and Ch'ing-hai Provinces. It is also the real boundary between China and Tibet, though the present frontier is the Tang-la Range, running east and west, the divide between the Salween and Mekong rivers.
    • 1970, Joseph B. R. Whitney, China: Area, Administration, and Nation Building[4], Department of Geography, University of Chicago, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 38:
      In the west, the outer periphery of the Inner Zone is the great divide separating Pacific Ocean and South China Sea drainage on the one hand, from drainage oriented towards Hsin-chiang in the northwest and towards the Indian Ocean in the southwest, on the other. This divide also represents a fairly pronounced stress zone between the tenuous power China has been able to maintain over Tibet to the west and the firmer control she has been able to exercise over Hsi-k'ang and Ch'ing-hai to the east.
    • 2007, Laurie Burnham, Rivers (The Extreme Earth)‎[5], Chelsea House, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 45:
      The Yangtze River first formed millions of years ago, a by-product of continental drift. Although the process itself took many millennia, the Ch'ing-hai (Qinghai) Plateau, from which the Yangtze descends, rose from the Earth's crust some 40 million years ago when the Indian subcontinent and Eurasia crashed into one another, forming a single landmass.

Translations edit

References edit

  1. ^ Qinghai, Wade-Giles romanization Ch’ing-hai, in Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ “Selected Glossary”, in The Cambridge Encyclopedia of China[1], Cambridge University Press, 1982, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 476, 477:The glossary includes a selection of names and terms from the text in the Wade-Giles transliteration, followed by Pinyin, [] Ch'ing-hai (Qinghai) 靑海

Further reading edit