English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From the Postal Romanization of Nanjing court dialect Mandarin 四川 (Sìchuān).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈsɛʃ.wɑn/, /ˈsɛt͡ʃ.wɑn/, /ʃɛʃ.wɑn/

Proper noun edit

Szechuan

  1. Alternative form of Sichuan
    • 1913, Ernest Henry Wilson, A Naturalist In Western China, With Vasculum, Camera, And Gun: Being Some Account of Eleven Years' Travel, Exploration, and Observation in the More Remote Parts of the Flowery Kingdom[1], volume I, London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., page 104:
      THE plain of Chengtu is the only large expanse of level ground in the great province of Szechuan; it is also one of the richest, most fertile, and thickly populated areas in the whole of China.
    • [1919, John C. Ferguson, Outlines of Chinese Art[2], Chicago: University of Chicago Press, →OCLC, page 116:
      There is a portrait of Confucius at Ch’ü-fu attributed to Wu and another striking picture representing the struggle of a tortoise with a serpent, kuei she t’u, which is in the Prefect's official residence at Ch’êng-tu, Sze-ch’uan.]
    • 1967, Dennis J. Doolin, Charles P. Ridley, THE GENESIS OF A MODEL CITIZEN IN COMMUNIST CHINA: TRANSLATION AND ANALYSIS OF SELECTED CHINESE COMMUNIST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL READERS[3], Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, page 476:
      Li Po is also the author of this poem. Pai-ti is on a mountain in eastern Feng-chieh county in Szechuan Province.
    • 1973, Rewi Alley, 中国见闻 [Travels in China, 1966-71]‎[4], Peking: New World Press, →OCLC, page 25:
      The highway is one that was built to enable the Chiang Kai-shek government to evacuate to Chungking in the War of Resistance days, and Huayuan, our objective, is a county town in the middle of a high mountain plateau, only 25 kilometres from the Szechuan border.
    • 1980, Ch'ien Tuan-sheng, edited by Harold C. Hinton, How the People's Government Works, 1952 (The People's Republic of China 1949-1979)‎[5], volume 1, Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources Inc., →ISBN, page 58:
      In far-off southern Szechuan province last summer, while helping the peasants to effect the land reform, I saw group after group of young peasants, men and women, volunteer to help the aggressors away from our border and help neighboring Korea.
    • 1981 March 22, “Chinese opera delights audience at international arts festival”, in Free China Weekly[6], volume XXII, number 11, Taipei, page 2:
      Szechuan Province in southeastern China is well endowed with natural resources, fine landscapes and a long rich history. In early times, the several states which made Szechuan their home produced a line of famous generals whose lives have become the subject of myth, literary works and operas. Szechuan opera is one of the most classical of all Chinese opera styles.
    • 2003 October 5, Corinne LaBalme, “WHAT'S DOING IN; Paris”, in The New York Times[7], archived from the original on 27 May 2015, Travel‎[8]:
      But long before that, Parisians will have had ample chance to familiarize themselves with Chinese culture. From Oct. 14 to Jan. 28, the Hôtel de Ville, [] showcases recent Bronze Age excavations in the Szechuan Province, in western China, including artifacts from the Jinsha site (1200-1000 B.C.) discovered in February 2001.
    • 2008, Simon Foster, “The Three Gorges”, in Adventure Guide: China (Hunter Travel Guides)‎[9], Hunter Publishing, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 263:
      This gargantuan population and the city’s strategic importance led to Chongqing’s separation from its parent province, Szechuan, in 1997, and it was designated as a “specially administered municipality,” controlled directly by the central government.
    • 2012, Saul David, editor, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Warfare[10], Dorling Kindersley, →ISBN, page 283:
      Despite this aerial assistance, the Chinese were again forced to withdraw westward, this time to Chongqing in the mountains of Szechuan.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Szechuan.

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit