释义 |
Examples:Tripitaka (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—Xuanzang (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—Gujarat, state in west India—Marathi language of west India—BRICS economic bloc (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)—Ladakh, the eastern part of Jammu and Kashmir in northwest India, adjacent Kashmir and Tibet, know as "Little Tibet"—1954 Panchsheel series of agreements between PRC and India—journey to India on a quest for the Buddhist scriptures—old Chinese name for Calicut, town on Arabian sea in Kerala, India—Magadha, ancient India kingdom reported be the birthplace of Buddhism—Telegu, the official language of Andhra Pradesh, India—Andhra Pradesh or Andhra State in southeast India—Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh, north India, home of Tibetan government in exile—Gandhara Kingdom in northwest India, c. 600 BC-11 AD, on Kabul River in Vale of Peshawar—flower of north India (Datura stramonium, Sanskrit: mandara), considered sacred and grown in temples, similar belladonna—Chandighar, capital of Punjab state of northwest India—Bollywood (film industry based in Mumbai, India)—old tea-horse market between Tibet, China, Southeast Asia and India, formalized as a state enterprise under the Song dynasty—old tea-horse road or southern Silk Road, dating back 6th century, from Tibet and Sichuan through Yunnan and Southeast Asia, reaching to Bhutan, Sikkim, India and beyond—native state (term used by British Colonial power refer to independent states of India or Africa)—Panipat, ancient city in India—Zaheeruddin Babur (1483-1530), first ruler of Mughal dynasty of India—Punjab state in northwest India bordering Pakistan—calico (woven cloth from Caldicot, Kerala, India)—Lord Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma (1900-1979), British commander in Southeast Asia during WWII, presided over the partition of India in 1947, murdered by the IRA.—monk (Sanskrit: Sramana, originally refers north India)—Colonel Sir George Everest (1790-1866), British Surveyor-General of India 1830-1843— ▸ Wikipedia |