See also: yīndú, yǐndù, and Yìndù

EnglishEdit

 
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EtymologyEdit

From the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the Mandarin 殷都.

Proper nounEdit

Yindu

  1. A district of Anyang, Henan, China.
    • 2016, Wang, Shu-Li, “Civilization and the Transformation of Xiaotun Village at Yin Xu Archaeological Site, China”, in Christoph Brumann; David Berliner, editors, World Heritage on the Ground: Ethnographic Perspectives[1], Berghahn Books, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 182:
      In March 2007, at the suggestion of the Yindu District government, fourteen Xiaotun villagers collected 260,000 RMB to set up the Anyangdayishang wenhuachuanbo gongsi (Anyang Cultural Enterprise), which in turn founded the Xiaotun yishutuan (Xiaotun Performance Group).
    • 2022 September 2, “Schools introduce intangible cultural heritage to students in Anyang, central China's Henan (2)”, in Hongyu, editor, People's Daily Online[2], archived from the original on 2023-05-16[3]:
      A folk artist named Dong Huanjiao teaches students how to make paper cutting works at the Gangsanlu Primary School in Yindu district, Anyang city of central China's Henan Province. (Photo/Wang Fuqiang)
      Students of Gangsanlu Primary School in Yindu district, Anyang city of central China's Henan Province were given a class on paper cutting by a folk artist on Aug. 30, the day when the new semester started at the school.

TranslationsEdit

ZhuangEdit

 
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EtymologyEdit

From Mandarin 印度 (Yìndù).

PronunciationEdit

Proper nounEdit

Yindu (Sawndip form 印度, 1957–1982 spelling Yiƌu)

  1. India (a country in Asia)