See also: Yunyang

English

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Map including 鄖縣 YÜN-HSIEN (YÜN-YANG) (walled) (AMS, 1954) →OCLC
 
Map including 雲陽 YÜN-YANG (AMS, 1954)

Etymology 1

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From Mandarin 鄖陽郧阳 (Yúnyáng), Wade–Giles romanization: Yün²-yang².

Proper noun

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Yün-yang

  1. Alternative form of Yunyang, Hubei
    • 1913 July, Berthold Laufer, Notes on Turquois in the East[1], Chicago, →OCLC, page 65:
      From one of the turquois dealers in Si-ngan fu the information was given me that the turquoises traded there come from the prefecture of Yün-yang in Hu-pei Province, while another more especially point to the district of Chu-shan, situated in the same prefecture, as the place of production. The Imperial Geography (Ta Ts'ing i t'ung chi, Ch. 272),³ in the chapter dealing with Yün-yang fu, contains no allusion to this fact, and mentions in an enumeration of the mountains of the Chu-shan district only one producing stones, the Fan shi shan, deriving its name from the fan shi or alum formerly produced there.
Translations
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Etymology 2

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From Mandarin 雲陽云阳 (Yúnyáng), Wade–Giles romanization: Yün²-yang².

Proper noun

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Yün-yang

  1. Alternative form of Yunyang, Chongqing
    • [1898, Archibald John Little, Through the Yang-tse Gorges[2], 3rd edition, Sampson Low, Marston & Company, →OCLC, page 98:
      Yun-yang hsien, or Clouded Sun City, is situated on the left bank of a picturesque gorge formed by pyramidal mountains, horizontally stratified, and 1000 to 1500 feet in height.]
Translations
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Further reading

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