Huhehaote

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See also: Hūhéhàotè

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the Mandarin 呼和浩特 (Hūhéhàotè).

Proper noun[edit]

Huhehaote

  1. Synonym of Hohhot: the Mandarin Chinese-derived name.
    • [1973, M. Gardner Clark, “Footnotes”, in Development of China's Steel Industry and Soviet Technical Aid[1], Ithaca, N.Y.: New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 147, column 2:
      In July 1958 a rash of machinery plants began to make their own iron and steel from small modern furnaces. For example, the Hsin-sheng Machinery Plant in Huhohaote, Inner Mongolia, began producing pig iron for its own use on July 1 from two 13 cubic meter blast furnaces and announced the intention of installing two more, each of 55 cubic meter capacity during 1958; see Nei meng ku Jih-pao (Huhohaote), July 2, 1958, p. 1 (cit., WIRCC, no. 233, p. 5).]
    • 1981, P. R. S. Moorey, Emma C. Bunker, Edith Porada, Glenn Markoe, Ancient Bronzes Ceramics and Seals[2], Los Angeles County Museum of Art, →ISBN, page 160:
      These bronzes relate stylistically to pieces said to come from western Inner Mongolia. A recently excavated example dated to the fourth- second century B.C. was discovered at Huhehaote.
    • 1997, Yu-Ping Liu, Chikashi Ito, Katsuko Komatsu, Tadato Tani, Dai-Wen Shi, Tsuneo Namba, “Pharmacognostical Studies on the Sino-Japanese Crude Drugs "Huajiao (花椒)" and "Sansho (山椒)" (Part 4) Determination of Botanical Origin of Chinese Crude Drug "Jiaomu (椒目)" by Scanning Electron Microscopy”, in Journal of Japanese Botany[3], page 93:
      The commercial samples of Shanghai and Datong (Shanxi) market were the seed of Z. bungeanum and that of Huhehaote (Inner Mongolia) market was a mixture of seeds and pericarps of Z. schinifolium.
    • 2004, Treasures of China[4], Reader's Digest, →ISBN, page 33:
      Located in the eastern section of Huhehaote City, the Huayan Sutra Pagoda goes by the far more formidable full name of Wanbu Huayan Jingta (Ten Thousand Volumes of Avata-masake Sutra Pagoda), but it is commonly called the White Tower.
    • 2018 April 6, Yue Wang, “Pinduoduo: The $1.5B Startup Challenging E-Commerce Giant Alibaba In China's Towns And Villages”, in Forbes[5], archived from the original on 26 March 2023, Asia‎[6]:
      With a monthly income of $470, Liu, a retired worker living in the northern city of Huhehaote, finds the selections on Alibaba’s sites a bit expensive.

Further reading[edit]