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Definition of Tai yuan
1. Noun. A branch of the Tai languages.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tai Yuan
Literary usage of Tai yuan
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Missionary Review of the World by James Lutzweiler (1900)
"GB Farthing and wife, Tai-yuan fu. AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN. CVR Hodge and wife,
Pao-ting fu. Miss M. Mackey, Peking. FK Simcox and wife, Pao-ting fu. ..."
2. Through Hidden Shensi by Francis Henry Nichols (1902)
"tai yuan certainly was devoid of " emblems of eternal rest. ... It is almost
impossible to walk a quarter of a mile on a tai yuan street in the same ..."
3. Through Hidden Shensi by Francis Henry Nichols (1902)
"tai yuan certainly was devoid of " emblems of eternal rest. ... It is almost
impossible to walk a quarter of a mile on a tai yuan street in the same ..."
4. In the Footsteps of Marco Polo: Being the Account of a Journey Overland from by Clarence Dalrymple Bruce (1907)
"Following the valley of the Fen-ho, we reached Tai-yuan-fu, the capital of Shansi,
in three days. Tai-yuan-fu is chiefly known to Europeans ..."
5. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) (1907)
"At Fen Chou the main highway from Sian Fu to Tai-yuan Fu was reached. ...
Between Tai-yuan Fu and Cheng-ting Fu, the latter a station on the Lu-Hau railway ..."