away.] 1968, “<span class="searchmatch">CHI</span>-<span class="searchmatch">LUNG</span> (KEELUNG; Japanese, KIIRUN)”, in Encyclopedia Britannica, volume 5, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 550, column 1: <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-<span class="searchmatch">lung's</span> foreign and domestic...
Railway), which enters the Hei-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span>-chiang Province from the north-west and divides at Harbin (哈爾賓[sic – meaning 哈爾濱]) in the <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-lin Province, one branch going...
Railway), which enters the Hei-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span>-chiang Province from the north-west and divides at Harbin (哈爾賓[sic – meaning 哈爾濱]) in the <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-lin Province, one branch going...
column 1: Keelung River (JEE-<span class="searchmatch">LUNG</span>) or <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span> Ho (JEE-<span class="searchmatch">LUNG</span> HUH), 40 mi/64 km long, N Taiwan; rises near N coast, SE of <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span>; flows WSW, past Chitu, Shihchih...
45: In 921 Ch'i-<span class="searchmatch">chi</span> was invited by Kao Tsung-hui, military commissioner of the Chiang-ling area in Hupei, to head a temple called the <span class="searchmatch">Lung</span>-hsing-ssu in Chiang-ling...
Railway), which enters the Hei-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span>-chiang Province from the north-west and divides at Harbin (哈爾賓[sic – meaning 哈爾濱]) in the <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-lin Province, one branch going...
Tung-ching-ch'eng in Hei-<span class="searchmatch">lung</span>-chiang province, Manchuria, and there were four secondary capitals- the "Central Capital" at modern Tun-hua in <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-lin province, Manchuria...
from the original on June 02, 2022, Taiwan News, page 2[2]: Lin <span class="searchmatch">Chi</span>-shui (林祺水), <span class="searchmatch">Lung</span> Jen-piao (龍仁標), Huang Wei-chou (黃唯洲) and Chang Teng-ping (張登平) from...
45: In 921 Ch'i-<span class="searchmatch">chi</span> was invited by Kao Tsung-hui, military commissioner of the Chiang-ling area in Hupei, to head a temple called the <span class="searchmatch">Lung</span>-hsing-ssu in Chiang-ling...
all work and subject him to Party discipline. 1972, Helen Foster Snow, “Ho <span class="searchmatch">Lung</span>, China's Red Robin Hood”, in The Chinese Communists[2], Westport, Conn.:...