Namahsia

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Mandarin 那瑪夏 (Nàmǎxià), Wade–Giles romanization: Na⁴-ma³-hsia⁴.

Proper noun[edit]

Namahsia

  1. Alternative form of Namasia
    • 2009, Taiwan Business Topics[1], volume 39, American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 25, column 2:
      Citing an example of cooperation at the local level, Her says the foundation built nearly 1,000 houses - powered by state-of-the-art solar energy systems - on land provided by the Kaohsiung County government for those displaced from devastated regions around Namahsia.
    • 2009 August 11, “700 trapped, possibly dead, in Taiwan: military”, in Reuters[2], archived from the original on 02 October 2022, Editor's Picks‎[3]:
      Hu Jui-chou, an army major-general involved in rescue operations, said those trapped included people buried by a massive landslide in Hsiao Lin, a village of 1,000 in Kaohsiung county. Many were also trapped in a second village, Namahsia.
    • 2009 August 12, “Rescuer find 700 safe after Taiwan mudslide”, in China Daily[4], archived from the original on 15 August 2009[5]:
      Others from the villages of Sanmin, Namahsia and Chinghe were also found safe.
    • 2015 August 21, “Archives 2014”, in National Museum of Natural Science[6], archived from the original on 06 October 2022:
      February 26 Exhibition
      Sunshine Moving Elementary School
      A traveling exhibition titled 'Sunshine Moving Elementary School', presented by the National Museum of Natural Science in partnership with DELTA Electronics Foundation, will be showcased at the Museum's plaza on Shi-tun Road from Feb. 27 through Apr. 9, 2014. The exhibition will inspire people of every age to be part of green revolution with the example of Ming-chuan Elementary School in Namahsia District, Kaohsiung City.
    • 2017 June 5, Jou-Ting (王柔婷) Wang, 陳顯坤 [Chen Hsien-Kun], “桃源累積雨量冠全台 勤和部落10民宅沖毀 [KAOHSIUNG'S TAUYUAN HAS ACCUMULATED RAINFALL OF 1,337 MM IN 3 DAYS, MOST IN TAIWAN]”, in Anthony Lin, transl., Public Television Service[7], archived from the original on 07 June 2017[8]:
      As to the Provincial Highway 29 at Namahsia District, eight road foundations were lost, but local residents use an alternative route for ins and outs.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Namahsia.