释义 |
Examples:ancient ethnic group of northeast frontier of China—Zhengzhou prefecture level city and capital of Henan Province in central China—Changsha prefecture level city and capital of Hunan province in south central China—State Council Information Office of the People's Republic of China—Treaty of Nanjing (1842) that concluded the First Opium War between Qing China and Britain—fail the civil service examination in Imperial China—China Network Communications (CNC) Group Corporation (one of China's large telephone companies)—China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT)—prohibition on opium (esp. in China from 1729)—Chinese customs gold unit, currency used in China between 1930 and 1948—north China army, a modernizing Western-style army set up during late Qing, and a breeding ground for the Northern Warlords after the Qinghai revolution—June Teufel Dreyer, China expert at Univ. of Miami and Foreign Policy Research Institute—examination hall used for provincial imperial examinations in imperial China—title of an official historian in ancient China—The Export-Import Bank of China (state owned bank)—border area of northwest China (i.e. Xinjiang)—CNPC, China National Petroleum Corporation (abbr.)—entente (i.e. Western powers allied China in WW1)—the Marco Polo Bridge Incident of 7th July 1937 that sparked WW2 between Japan and China—China UnionPay (CUP), China's only domestic bank card organization—foreign religion (esp. Western Christianity in Qing China)—Three Alls Policy (kill all, burn all, loot all), Japanese policy in China during WWII—Make the country wealthy and the military powerful, slogan of modernizers in Qing China and Meiji Japan (Japanese pronunciation: Fukoku kyōhei)—one of the five degrees of official mourning attire in dynastic China—East China University of Science and Technology—Dadu, capital of China during the Yuan Dynasty (1280-1368), modern day Beijing—provincial military governor during the early Republic of China era (1911-1949 AD)—David Clive Wilson, Baron Wilson of Tillyorn (1935-), British diplomat and China expert, Governor of Hong Kong 1986-1992—the Baima or White horse temple in Luoyang, one of the earliest Buddhist temples in China—Matsu, name of a sea goddess still widely worshipped on the SE China coast and in SE Asia—Xinjiang small-plate chicken (typical dish from North-West China)—Heilongjiang river forming the border between northeast China and Russia—northerner, person from Northern China (Cantonese)—mainland China (PRC excluding Hong Kong and Macau, but including islands such as Hainan)—(in Taiwan) Han Chinese people other than those who moved Taiwan from mainland China after 1945 and their descendants— |