释义 |
Examples:the northern part of the country—Kaifeng prefecture level city in Henan, old capital of Northern Song, former provincial capital of Henan—Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), the ruling party of North Korea—Fan Zhongyan (989-1052), minister of Northern Song, led failed reform of 1043—Anhui faction of Northern Warlords 1911-c.1929—Li Delin (530-590), historian of Northern Wei and Sui dynasty—Kaifeng as the capital of Northern Song dynasty—the Northern Expedition, the Nationalists' campaign of 1926-1928 under Chiang Kai-shek, against the rule of local warlords—Chagang province, at far north of north Korea, adjacent Jilin—Beiyang faction of Northern Warlords—Xianbei or Xianbi, group of northern nomadic peoples—ancient tribe of northern China—Gao Yun (died 409) emperor of Northern or Later Yan dynasty—a slogan used in reference a project to improve greenery in some parts of Northern China—failed reform of Northern Song government in 1043—Xianbei or Xianbi, historic ethnic group of northern nomads—United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland —raccoon of North China, Korea and Japan (Japanese: tanuki)—Wushan county in Wanzhou suburbs of north Chongqing municipality, formerly in Sichuan—Liangping county in Wanzhou suburbs of north Chongqing municipality, formerly in Sichuan—Fengtian clique (of northern warlords)—Tsaidam or Qaidam basin (Mongolian: salt marsh), depression northeast of the Plateau of Tibet, located between the Qilian Shan and the Kunlun Shan at the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau.—Wei of the Northern Dynasties 386-534—Babuyan Archipelago in Luzon Strait north of the Philippines—"Collection of the Most Important Military Techniques", book published in 1044 during the Northern Song Dynasty—Darwin, capital of the Northern Territory, Australia—Committee for peaceful reunification of the fatherland (North Korean)—non-Han tribes in the east and north of ancient China—Tantui, a northern school of martial arts boxing—Northern Liang of the Sixteen Kingdoms (398-439)—Kim Il Sung (1912-1994) Great Leader of North Korea—Lelang commandery (108 BC-313 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—former southernmost province of the Chinese Empire, now northern Vietnam—the treaty of 1923 normalizing relations between the Soviet Union and the Northern Warlord government of China—Northern Territory, sparsely populated federal territory extending from center north of Australia—Qi of the Northern Dynasties (550-557)—South P'yong'an Province in west of North Korea—Cao Kun (1862-1938), one of the Northern Warlords—North Hwanghae Province 황해북도 of west North Korea—period of low water level (winter in north China)—Xu Shichang (1855-1939), politician associated with the Northern Warlords, president of China in 1921—Sun Chuanfang (1885-1935) one of the northern warlord, murdered in Tianjin in 1935—war of 1920 between Northern Warlords, in which the Zhili faction beat the Anhui faction and took over the Beijing government—one of the Northern Dynasties—Ding Ruchang (1836-1895), commander of the Qing North China Navy—Hexi Corridor (or Gansu Corridor), a string of oases running the length of Gansu, forming part of the Northern Silk Road—the Zhili faction of the Northern Warlords—Kim KyeGwan 김계관 (1943-), North Korean diplomat, vice-foreign minister of—Baengnyeong Island of South Korea, near the Northern Limit Line—Su Xun (1009-1066), northern Song writer of prose—name of Qing dynasty province covering south Jiangsu, south Anhui and north Zhejiang provinces, with capital at Nanjing—Naypyidaw or Nay Pyi Taw, jungle capital of Myanmar (Burma) since November 2005, 300 km north of Rangoon and 300 km south of Mandalay—Northern Yan of the Sixteen Kingdoms (409-436)—Wei of the Northern Dynasties (386-534)—the Winnowing Basket in the southern sky, and the Big Dipper in the north (idiom); sth. which, despite its name, is of no practical use— |