K'un-lun
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Mandarin 崑崙/昆仑 (Kūnlún), Wade–Giles romanization: Kʻun¹-lun².[1]
Proper noun
[edit]K'un-lun
- Alternative form of Kunlun
- 1923, Aurel Stein, Memoir on Maps of Chinese Turkistan and Kansu from the Surveys Made during Sir Aurel Stein's Explorations[1], Dehra Dun: Trigonometrical Survey Office, page 41:
- On the south this hunge drainageless area is bordered throughout by the northernmost chain of the mighty mountain system of the K'un-lun and by the spurs it sends down toward the plains.
- 1966, Translations on People's Republic of China[2], United States Joint Publications Research Service, →OCLC, page 97:
- The Ho-t'ien Special District in the Uighur Autonomous Region of Sinkiang, lying north of the K'un-lun Mountain and south of the T'a-k'o-la-ma-kan Desert, suffered regularly before the liberation from the menace of drought and sand storm.
- 2001 November/December, Murray Eiland, Quentin Williams, “All That Is Green Is Not Jade”, in Minerva[3], volume 12, number 6, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 45, column 2:
- This city lies in an oasis in the Taklamakan Desert, a region which can be characterised by a near-lunar landscape where little life is found. The city lies at the foot of the K’un-lun mountains and jade is collected from two rivers, the Kara-kash and the Yurung-kash, meaning ‘Black Jade River’ and ‘White Jade River’ respectively.
Translations
[edit]Kunlun — see Kunlun
References
[edit]- ^ Mountains Kunlun Mountains, (Wade-Giles romanization) K’un-lun Shan, in Encyclopædia Britannica