Yang-tzŭ
English
Etymology
From Mandarin 揚子/扬子 (Yángzǐ), Wade–Giles romanization: Yang²-tzŭ³.
Proper noun
Yang-tzŭ
- (obsolete) Alternative form of Yangtze
- 1907, Arthur Henderson Smith, The Uplift of China, The Eddy Press, →OCLC, page 5:
- China is cut through by many great rivers, of which the mighty Yang-tzŭ, and the Huang Ho, or Yellow River, are the chief. Each of these rises in the mountains of Tibet, and finds its way eastward to the sea. The Yang-tzŭ, which is 60 miles wide at its mouth, with its numerous tributaries is to China what the Mississippi and Amazon are to the United States and South America.
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Translations
Yangtze — see Yangtze
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