释义 |
Examples:autumn exam (triennial provincial exam during Ming and Qing)—Kaifeng prefecture level city in Henan, old capital of Northern Song, former provincial capital of Henan—provincial Party committee—provincial level scenic area in Hunan—provincial or county guild hall—first-placed candidate in the provincial imperial examinations (old)—the triennial provincial imperial exam during the Ming and Qing—Provincial Property Tax Office—senior provincial government official in dynastic China—examination hall used for provincial imperial examinations in imperial China—Lu Rongting (1858-1928), provincial governor of Guangxi under the Qing, subsequently leader of old Guangxi warlord faction—middle period of a tripartite provincial exam (in former times)—sub-provincial (not provincial status, but independent)—state provincial warehouse (esp. during Qing dynasty)—provincial military governor and civil administrator during the early Republic of China era (1911-1949 AD)—the Ming dynasty provincial headquarters in the Heilongjiang and Vladivostok area—pass the provincial level imperial examination—provincial governor (old)—successful candidate in the imperial provincial examination—Tang and Song dynasty provincial governor, in Tang times having military and civil authority, but only civil authority in Song—provincial governor (in Qing and Ming times)—provincial military governor during the early Republic of China era (1911-1949 AD)—provincial judge (in imperial China)—provincial imperial examination graduate who ranked 1st in metropolitan examination (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—provincial level (e.g. government)—provincial government n —successful military candidate in the imperial provincial examination—Provincial Department of Agriculture—Chung-hsing New Village, model town in Nantou County, west-central Taiwan, administrative seat of the Taiwan Provincial Government—head of provincial PRC government department—former Tibetan province of Kham, now split between Tibet and Sichuan—Treaty of Saint Petersburg of 1881, whereby Russia handed back Yili province Qing China in exchange for compensation payment and unequal treaty rights—Yeosu city in South Jeolla province, Korea, the site of World Expo 2012—Wuhan city on Changjiang, subprovincial city and capital of Hubei province—Kilju county in North Hamgyeong province, North Korea—Daxing'anling mountain range in northwest Heilongjiang province—Shaoguan prefecture level city in Guangdong province—St John's, capital of Labrador and Newfoundland province, Canada—Regina city, capital of Saskatchewan province, Canada—inspector-general of province in Ming and Qing times—Moenjo-daro, capital of Indus valley civilization c. 2000 BC, Sind province, Pakistan, UNESCO World Heritage Site—Hubei and Hunan provinces (a Ming dynasty province)—Kunqu opera, influential musical theater originating in Kunshan, Jiangsu province in Yuan times—Jinan University in Guangdong Province, with 4 campuses in Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai—Shanwei prefecture level city in Guangdong province—Chagang province, at far north of north Korea, adjacent Jilin—the Yingxian wooden pagoda or Sakyamuni Pagoda near Datong in Shanxi province—name of a river flowing through Gansu Shaanxi Province—name of an ancient state that existed in what is now Shaanxi Province—Changbaishan Tianchi, volcanic lake in Jilin province—South Hwanghae Province 황해남도 of west North Korea—Qingyuan prefecture level city in Guangdong province—han, a province under a feudal overlord in premodern Japan—Solitary Hill, located in West Lake, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province—South Hamgyeong Province 함경남도 of east North Korea—Alcántara, municipality in the province of Cáceres, Extremadura, Spain—British Columbia, province of Canada (loanword from "BC")—sub-prefecture level city (county level division, administered by province, not under a prefecture)—Amhara (province, language and ethnic group of Ethiopia)—traditional communal residence, usually of circular shape, found in Fujian province—Rehe, Qing dynasty province abolished in 1955 and divided among Hebei, Liaoning and Inner Mongolia—Shin'ŭiju, capital of North Pyong'an Province, North Korea—name of Qing dynasty province covering south Jiangsu, south Anhui and north Zhejiang provinces, with capital at Nanjing— |