Tai'erzhuang
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See also: Taierzhuang
English[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
- Taierzhuang (also from Hanyu Pinyin)
- Taierhchwang (Postal Romanization)
- T'ai-erh-chuang, T'ai-êrh-chuang (Wade–Giles)
Etymology[edit]
From the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the Mandarin Chinese pronunciation for 臺兒莊/台兒莊/台儿庄 (Tái'érzhuāng).
Pronunciation[edit]
Proper noun[edit]
Tai'erzhuang
- A district of Zaozhuang, Shandong, China.
- 2005, Israel Epstein, History Should Not Be Forgotten[1], Beijing: China Intercontinental Press (五洲传播出版社), →ISBN, page 67:
- Highly placed Japanese spokesmen, shocked by their reverse at Tai'erzhuang, and that at the hands of "secondary" troops, resorted to their favored way of dealing with setbacks. They denied for days not only the Chinese had won back Tai'erzhuang, but that the important rail knot at Xuzhou, of which Tai'erzhuang was an outpost, had never been a Japanese goal in the campaign, which of course it was - and continued to be.