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English
Etymology
Borrowed from Mandarin 沙市 (Shāshì).
Proper noun
Shasi
- Dated form of Shashi.
1929, Asiatic Pilot (Volume III): Coast of China, Yalu River to Hong Kong entrance including the coasts of Taiwan (Formosa), 3rd edition, Washington: United States Government Printing Office, page 266:Shasi, as seen from the river, has a very uninviting appearance, but it contains a very good and comparatively clean main street. A bund 400 yards long, built of hewn stone, with three large jetties for the use of hulks and two smaller jetties for native boats, has been constructed.
The trade of Shasi is very insignificant as compared with that of the other treaty ports. Most of the trade is carried on in native craft by means of the inland water communication with Hankow and other trade centers, which render it independent of the Yangtze and of stream transport.
1956, Theodore Shabad, China's Changing Map: A Political and Economic Geography of the Chinese People's Republic, New York: Frederick A. Praeger, page 141:West of Wuhan are the Yangtze River ports of Shasi and Ichang. Shasi is a water transportation center on the north bank of the Yangtze. It is linked with Hankow, in addition to the river itself, by a junk route utilizing a maze of waterways and lakes north of the Yangtze River.
1968, Herold Jacob Wiens, “SHASI (SHA-SHIH)”, in Encyclopedia Britannica, volume 20, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 354, column 2:Called "Little Hankow" after the most important commercial port of central China about 120 mi. (190 km.) eastward, Shasi is the centre for numerous canal connections, one of which shortens to a third the circuitous Yangtze River distance to the Wu-han metropolital area.
1969, Albert Feuerwerker, The Chinese Economy, ca. 1870-1911, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 18:From Kiangnan (i.e., the area south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze river) and the districts around Shasi in Hupei, for example, large quantities of baled raw cotton and woven piece goods were carried by water and on the back of porters to Manchuria and North China, to Szechwan via the Yangtze, to Yunnan and Kweichow in the southwest, and to the southern coastal provinces.
1996, George Bishop, Travels in Imperial China: The Explorations and Discoveries of Père David, paperback edition, Cassell, page 120:David and the other missionaries could have made the trip to Chungking on one large boat. However, between Hankow and Shasi the Yangtze had so many turns and twists that the journey would have taken at least a fortnight, and they had already lost much time waiting for the floods to subside. They decided to travel by two smaller boats.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Shasi.
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