See also: Taitung and T'ai-tung

English edit

Proper noun edit

T'aitung

  1. Alternative spelling of Taitung
    • 1999, Paul Jen-kuei Li, Rukai Texts[1], →ISBN, →OCLC:
      These texts were collected in T'aitung, Taiwan, --in the village of Tanan. The Rukai tribe there is known as Taromak.
    • 2001, Richard Bennett, “Taiwan”, in Fighting Forces[2], Barron's Educational Series, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 173, column 1:
      There are three army groups and one airborne special operations headquarters. Major garrisons are to be found on the islands of Kinmen (Quemoy), Matsu, P'enghu, Hualien-T'aitung, and the smaller Tungyin Island and Chukuang Island[sic] commands.
    • 2010, John A. Harper, “Taiwan”, in Mobilize!: Reassembling Forces with the World in Chaos[3] (Fiction), AuthorHouse, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 154:
      Colonel Sun translates for Minister Yao and relays the minister’s reply. “Minister Yao advises that ROC Marine Corps headquarters is on the Naval Station at Tsoying, near Kaosiung, on the southwest coast. He suggests you do the Four Ninety-ninth wing this morning and the Marine headquarters this afternoon. It will take you about an hour to reach Tsoying by helicopter from Hsinchu. He just ordered General Peng to arrange meetings with the Navy and Marines at Tsoying, and transportation. From there we will go to Army headquarters at Hualien-T'aitung.”
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:T'aitung.