English

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新北市新莊體育館
Hsinchuang Gymnasium

Etymology

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From Mandarin 新莊 (Xīnzhuāng), Wade–Giles romanization: Hsin¹-chuang¹.

Proper noun

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Hsinchuang

  1. Alternative form of Xinzhuang.
    • 1975, David M. Heer, Hsin-ying Wu, “The Effect of Infant and Child Mortality and Preference for Sons Upon Fertility and Family Planning Behavior”, in John F. Kantner, Lee Caffrey, editors, Population and Development in Southeast Asia[1], Lexington Books, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 257:
      Interviews in the low-mortality community were conducted in Hsinchuang township and in the high-mortality community in Kungliao township. Both of these townships were located in Taipei county.
    • 1978, “Rural Taiwan and Urban Morocco”, in Samuel H. Preston, editor, The Effects of Infant and Child Mortality on Fertility[2], Academic Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 139–140:
      Hsinchuang township lies within the Taipei basin on the north side of the Tamshui River. Most of the township consists of flat alluvial land used for rice paddy. Although the township is situated a short distance north of the main railroad from Taipei to Kaohsiung, it is directly located on one of the main highways leading southwest from Taipei, and frequent buses travel to and from Taipei. Roads within the township are good although often crowded. The town of Hsinchuang is the site of both Foojen University, a Roman Catholic Institution supported in large part with funds from West Gernamny, and the Taiwan Provincial Institute of Health.
    • 1999, Itsuo Inouye, The New York Times[3], archived from the original on 16 October 2022[4]:
      A Taiwanese woman waits as rescuers dig through the remains of her earthquake-demolished apartment where her family is still trapped in Hsinchuang.
    • 2016 January 29, Joe Henley, “Live Wire: A brief history of (Taiwanese) punk”, in Taipei Times[5], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2017-08-30, Features, page 11[6]:
      So what does a scene do when the Shidahood Self-Help Organizations of the world brashly defy the sacristy of their basement hovels and scream at them to leave? The scene heads out from the interior into the hinterland of the suburbs. They make tracks for Holy Land (聖地搖滾工作室) in Hsinchuang. They seek out alternative venues, as a group of punks, metal heads and other denizens of the alternative music community did last weekend, staging a show under a bridge in Taipei’s Guting Riverside Park. They resist and survive.
    • 2018 June 10, Renée Salmonsen, “Bird causes power outage in New Taipei City”, in Taiwan News[7], archived from the original on 12 June 2018, Society‎[8]:
      The Luchou, Hsinchuang, and Sanchung areas of New Taipei City briefly lost power.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Hsinchuang.