Citations:Macau

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of Macau

Map including MACAU 澳門 (AMS, 1954)
  • 1598, “24 Of the courſe out of the Hauen of Macau in China to the Iſland of Pulo Tymon, & the ſtraight of Sincapura.”, in W. P., transl., The Nauigation of the Portingales into the Eaſt Indies[1], London: John Wolfe, page 349:
    When you depart from Macau to ye other coaſt, you must put out at the Eaſt chanel, if the wind bee Northweſt, if not, then you cannot paſſe, that way, but you muſt ſayle thorough the ſouthweſt chanel, which is a good way to paſſe out, running from the point of Varella, right unto the land on the other ſide of Macau, []
  • 1986 January 12, Rudy Maxa, “Magical Macau, Gateway to China”, in The Washington Post[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on December 31, 2023[3]:
    The six-square-mile territory consists of two rural islands and the peninsula city of Macau, where 90 percent of Macau's 420,000 citizens live and work. Hilly and verdant, this commercial and residential heart of Macau borders on southeastern China. To the south of the main part of Macau, a bridge spanning a mile and a half of water leads to the island of Taipa, and a causeway connects Taipa to the other island, Coloane.
  • 1990, Shann Davies, Macau[4], Passport Books, →ISBN Invalid ISBN, page 10:
    Within 20 years, Macau had become an international city and one of the richest places on earth, thanks to investment in the cargoes shipped through the port.
  • 2015 September 12, Jochen Faget, “Crisis in China's gambling paradise”, in DW News[5], archived from the original on 12 September 2015[6]:
    Open 24 hours a day and seven days a week, Macau's 35 casinos entertain around 30 million visitors each year, making over 30 billion euros in revenue. These are figures which make the US gambling city of Las Vegas look like a desert village. []
    Macau is the only place in China where gambling is officially permitted. Until the end of 1999, the peninsula was a Portuguese colony. Since it was handed back to China, the city of 600,000 people located at the mouth of the Pearl River has been a largely autonomous Special Administrative Region (SAR).
  • 2023 March 22, Nicole Hong, Alexandra Stevenson, “China Approves an mRNA Covid Vaccine, Its First”, in The New York Times[7], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 23 March 2023, Business‎[8]:
    At the height of the Covid wave, some mainland residents ventured across the border to the Chinese territory of Macau to find foreign-made mRNA vaccines.