Citations:Kaiping

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English citations of Kaiping

In Guangdong[edit]

  • 1973 April 29, “More refugees from the mainland”, in Free China Weekly[1], volume XIV, number 16, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
    A 24-year-old young man from Kaiping, Kwangtung was nearly drowned while swimming to Hongkong with his 23-year-old cousin last March 25.
  • 2007 June 28, James Pomfret, “Chinese diaspora villages made World Heritage site”, in Reuters[2], archived from the original on 01 March 2023, SCIENCE & SPACE‎[3]:
    Experts say up to 80 percent of the Chinese in North America came from the so called “Say-yat” region in the Pearl River Delta -- a group of four districts including Kaiping and Taishan.
  • 2010 February 18, Alan Chin, “Essay: A Home 8,000 Miles Away”, in The New York Times[4], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 04 December 2022, Lens‎[5]:
    Instead of the conventional transliteration system of Pinyin, which The Times ordinarily uses, Mr. Chin has employed Jyutping Cantonese in his post. Readers accustomed to seeing the name “Taishan” will find it rendered Toishan (台山) here, in part to avoid confusion with the famous mountain of Taishan (泰山) and also because Mr. Chin said it is closer to the local pronunciation. In this post, Gongmei is used for 江美, rather than “Jiangmei”; Hoiping for 開平, rather thanKaiping”; and Cekham for 赤坎, rather than “Chikan.” Slides 2, 3 and 8 were originally captioned Hoiping, but are now more precisely captioned Cekham. (The town of Cekham is part of the district of Hoiping, Mr. Chin explained.)
  • 2021 July 2, “Westfall Technik Acquires Multi-Site Consumer Packaging Molder CPP Global; Expands into North Carolina and China”, in AP News[6], archived from the original on 18 May 2022[7]:
    The deal greatly strengthens Westfall’s geographic footprint by adding its first plants in the southeastern United States, specifically in Mocksville and Asheboro, NC, as well in Kaiping, China, in Guangdong Province.

In Liaoning[edit]

  • 1965 May 10 [1965 April 18], “Administrative Division Changes Announced”, in Daily Report: Foreign Radio Broadcasts[8], number 89, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, →OCLC, pages CCC 6-CCC 7:
    The Ministry of Internal Affairs has announced the changes of administrative divisions in China between 1 January and 31 March 1965: []
    Liaoning Province:
    Antung city renamed Tantung city; Antung county renamed Tungkou county; Kaiping county renamed Kai county.