Citations:Chien-shih

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English citations of Chien-shih

In China[edit]

Map including Chien-shih (DMA, 1975)
  • 1962, Tʻung-tsu Chʻü, Local Government in China under the Ch'ing[1], Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 299:
    Tea certificates were issued by the magistrates of the following localities: Ch'ien-shan and sixteen other hsien in Anhui; Shan-hua and sixteen other hsien in Hunan. In Hupeh, certificates were issued by the magistrate of Chien-shih to tea merchants. In Hsien-ning and six other chou and hsien, tea planters also received certificates to sell tea (Hu-pu tse-li, 32:4-5).
  • 1965 [1959], C. K. Yang, “Changing Family Economic Structure”, in Chinese Communist Society: The Family and The Village[2], The M.I.T. Press, →OCLC, page 153:
    The head of an agricultural producers’ cooperative in Chien-shih county of Hupei Province lectured his peasant wife: “To gain emancipation, women must do production work just like men.”
  • 1977, Harold E. Malde, “Geology in Chinese Anthropology”, in Paleoanthropology in the People's Republic of China[3], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 57:
    Most interesting of all is the association of five teeth of G. blacki with four molars of a smaller hominid primate (see below) in Dragon Bone cave, Chien-shih district, western Hupei Province (Hsu et al., 1974; "Gao dian," 1975).

In Taiwan[edit]

  • 1972, Gerald D. Schmidt, Robert E. Kuntz, “Nematode Parasites of Oceania. XVIII. Caenorhabditis avicola sp. n. (Rhabditidae) Found in a Bird from Taiwan”, in Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington[4], volume 39, number 2, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 189:
    One male and three females were found in the intestine of a plumbeous water redstart near Chien-shih, Hsin-chu Hsien.