唐山

Chinese

Tang dynasty (618-907) mountain; hill
simp. and trad.
(唐山)

Pronunciation


Etymology 1

Some overseas Chinese thought of the mainland as an unfathomably tall mountain, which they connected to the physical height of the mountains to the Tang Dynasty, as it was one of the peaks of Chinese civilization. (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)

Proper noun

唐山

  1. (overseas, dated) China
  2. (Taiwan, dated) mainland China
    唐山台灣心肝 [Min Nan, trad.]
    唐山台湾心肝 [Min Nan, simp.]
    Tn̂g-soaⁿ kòe Tâi-oân, sim-koaⁿ kiat kui oân [Pe̍h-ōe-jī]
    As people went from mainland China over to Taiwan, their hearts became weighed down. (an idiom about the Chinese migration toward Taiwan in Qing Dynasty)
Synonyms
Derived terms
  • 唐山人 (tángshānrén)
  • 有唐山公,無唐山媽有唐山公,无唐山妈
  • 過唐山过唐山
See also

Etymology 2

Named after the Tang Mountain in the city; the Tang Mountain was named after the Tang Dynasty

Proper noun

唐山

  1. Tang Mountain (now called Dacheng Mountain)
  2. () Tangshan (a prefecture-level city in Hebei, China)

References


Japanese

Kanji in this term
とう
Grade: S
さん > ざん
Grade: 1
on’yomi

Proper noun

唐山 (hiragana とうざん, rōmaji Tōzan)

  1. Tangshan (city in China)
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