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日本語WordNet(英和)での「TAIWAN」の意味 |
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Taiwan
台湾島にある政府で1949年、毛沢東率いる共産党が中国本土を占領したとき蒋介石によって設置された
(a government on the island of Taiwan established in 1949 by Chiang Kai-shek after the conquest of mainland China by the Communists led by Mao Zedong)
Wiktionary英語版での「TAIWAN」の意味 |
T'ai-wan
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/09/14 15:33 UTC 版)
語源
From Mandarin 臺灣 / 台灣 (Táiwān) Wade–Giles romanization: Tʻai²-wan¹.
固有名詞
T'ai-wan
- Alternative form of Taiwan (island)
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1958, “China, Agriculture and Food Supply”, in C. K. Leung, Norton Ginsburg, editors, The Pattern of Asia, Edgewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., published 1961, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 177:
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The hilly topography restricts the cultivated area mainly to the valleys of the Hsi River and of its tributaries in Kuang-hsi and Kuang-tung and the lowlands of T'ai-wan and Hai-nan. Western T'ai-wan and the Hsi River delta have extremely high population densities.
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1973, Clifton W. Pannell, “Preface and Acknowledgements”, in T’ai-chung, T’ai-wan: Structure and Function, number 144, University of Chicago Department of Geography, →LCCN, →OCLC, page iii:
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In addition to SEADAG, I am also indebted to the University of Chicago, Committee on Far Eastern Studies, for supporting a year of additional language study in T'ai-wan and to the Inter-University Program for Chinese Languages Studies in T'ai-pei (administered by Stanford University) for round trip travel assistance to T'ai-wan.
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1973 February 16 [1972 February], “Shih-chieh Ti-t'u-ts'e (World Atlas) [世界地圖冊]”, in Translations on People's Republic of China, number 214, United States Joint Publications Research Service, sourced from Peking, translation of original in Chinese, →OCLC, Political and Sociological, page 12:
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Taiwan Province is abbreviated "T'ai" [0669]. It is situated in the sea in the southeastern part of the east China area, facing the Pacific Ocean to the east. In includes T'ai-wan Island, the Pescadores, the Tiao-yu Islands, Ch'in-wei Hsu [Islet], P'eng-chia Hsu, Lan Hsu, Huo-shao Island, and other ancillary islands and islets. It covers an area of 36,000 square kilometers, and has a population of 12,040,000. T'ai-wan Island is China's largest island.
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- Alternative form of Taiwan (administrative division)
- (historical) Alternative form of Taiwan (city of Tainan)
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1904, J. J. M. DeGroot, Sectarianism and Religious Persecution in China, volume II, Amsterdam: Johannes Müller, pages 343–344:
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Consternation and despair seized the district, and great numbers of sectaries and their families flocked together for the defence of their hearths and homes. Ch'ai Ta-ki abandoned Chang-hwa, and retired into T'ai-wan 臺灣, the chief city of the island....The rapid success of the insurgents was party owing to the circumstance that the Formosa cities in those days were unwalled, and merely surrounded by fences of living bamboo, no masonry being proof against the earthquakes frequently occurring in the island. T'ai-wan, likewise protected by a bamboo fence, was harried both from the north and the south, but successfully defended by Ch'ai Ta-ki...He called back the population, but with these many insurgents swarmed in, surprised the town again on the 10th of the third month (Apr. 27), and drove Hoh Chwang-yiu back to T'ai-wan.
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2017, “China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan”, in Julia Chandler, editor, The Colonial and Postcolonial Experience in East and Southeast Asia (The Colonial and Postcolonial Experience), 1st edition, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 73:
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参照
- ^ “Additional Terms”, in Chinese Phrase Book (TM 30-633), Washington, D. C.: United States War Department, 10 December 1943, →OCLC, pages 226, 227, lines 1, 17:
- ^ Taiwan, (Wade-Giles romanization) T’ai-wan, in Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^ Brian Hook, editor (1982), “Selected Glossary”, in The Cambridge Encyclopedia of China, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 476, 484: “The glossary includes a selection of names and terms from the text in the Wade-Giles transliteration, followed by Pinyin, […] T'ai-wan (Taiwan) 台灣”
Further reading
- T'ai-wan, T'aiwan, Tai-wan at the Google Books Ngram Viewer.
アナグラム
Taiwan
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/10 18:41 UTC 版)
別の表記
語源
The specific form "Taiwan" in English emerged from the Wade–Giles Tʻai²-wan¹ romanization of Mandarin 臺灣/台湾 (Táiwān), and also perhaps the romaji of Japanese 臺灣 (taiwan), both of which are ultimately from Literary Chinese 臺灣, from Hokkien 大員 (Tāi-oân), 大圓, 臺員, 大灣, 臺灣, and other forms, a placename initially referring to a sandbank peninsula that later silted up; now wholly part of the island in the area of modern-day Anping District, Tainan, and eventually became the name of the entire island. The original placename itself was originally likely the transcription of a loanword from Siraya.
Cognate with Dutch Tayouan / Taioan / Taiwan / etc., and other early variant forms of Hokkien 臺窩灣 / 台窝湾 (Tâi-o-oân), etc.
The name is sometimes folk-etymologized to have originally meant "terraced bay" (臺灣 / 台湾), "great bay" (大灣 / 大湾), or similar parsings from interpretations of the Chinese characters alone.
発音
固有名詞
Taiwan
- A partly-recognized country in East Asia consisting of a main island and 167 smaller islands. Official name: Republic of China. Capital: Taipei. [from 20th c.]
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1971, Lyndon Johnson, “Feeding the Hungry: India's Food Crisis”, in The Vantage Point, Holt, Reinhart & Winston, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 224:
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India was not alone in its predicament or in its policy. While a few developing countries like Taiwan, Mexico, and Thailand had made remarkable progress in agriculture and had experienced success in curbing their population increases, others were nearly as bad off as India, even without a drought.
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2018 October 9, “Taiwan conducts massive military drills ahead of National Day”, in EFE, archived from the original on 18 August 2022:
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Taiwan carried out an unprecedented military drill Tuesday, a day ahead of its National Day celebrations, in Taoyuan in northern parts of the country.
The drill was attended by Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen, and President of Paraguay Mario Abdo Benitez, who is on a state visit to Taiwan until Thursday.
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2025 August 29, Fabian Hamacher, Ben Blanchard, quoting Roger Wicker, “Taiwan has right to be free and 'preserve self-determination', senior US senator says”, in Stephen Coates, Frances Kerry, editors, Reuters, archived from the original on 29 August 2025:
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"We come here from the United States bringing a message from the Congress of commitment, of long-term friendship and a determination that a free country like Taiwan absolutely has the right to remain free and preserve self-determination," Wicker said.
Beijing, which regularly denounces any shows of support for Taipei from Washington, repeated its opposition to Wicker's trip. China firmly opposes any official exchanges between the United States and Taiwan, the country's foreign ministry said.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- An island between the Taiwan Strait and Philippine Sea in East Asia. [1600s]
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1888, James Harrison Wilson, chapter III, in China: Travels and Investigations in the "Middle Kingdom": A Study of Its Civilization and Possibilites, →OCLC, page 26:
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The Government claims suzerainty over and receives tribute more or less regularly from Corea, and also from Anam, Siam, Burmah, and part of the Loochoo Islands, and it has recently erected the beautiful and extensive Island of Formosa, or Taiwan, hitherto attached to the province of Fo-Kien, into a separate province with its own governor-general who, like those of the other provinces, is appointed directly from Peking.
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1900 June 1, W. M. Davis, “Current Notes on Physiography.”, in Science, volume XI, number 283, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 871, column 2:
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The Pescadores or Hoko islands, lying between Formosa (Taiwan) and the Chinese coast, are described by Koto (Notes on the Geology of the dependent isles of Taiwan, Journ. Coll. Sci., Imp. Univ., Tokyo, xiii, 1899, pt. 1) as the ragged remnants of a series of nearly horizontal basalt sheets with intercalated strata of supposed Tertiary age.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- A former administrative division including Taiwan and nearby islands.
- (historical) A former prefecture of Fujian province in China (Qing Empire) (1683–1885).
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1864, Robert Swinhoe, “Notes on the Island of Formosa.”, in The Journal of the Royal Geographic Society of London, volume XXXIV, London: John Murray, published 1865, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 6:
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TAIWAN, or Chinese Formosa, is considered a Foo or district of the province of Fokien, and is governed by a Taoutai extraordinary, who, though responsible to the provincial viceroy, possesses the privilege of memorialising the Throne direct. “The district of Taiwan,” says the Chinese Government Chart, of which a copy was supplied to me by the Formosan authorities, “is bounded in the rear by mountains, and in front by the sea. The ancestral hills of Formosa derive their origin from the Woo-hoo-mun (Five Tiger Gate), the entrance to Foochow, whence they glided across the sea. In the ocean towards the east are two places called Tungkwan (Damp Limit) and Pih-mow (White Acre), which mark the spots where the dragons of the Formosan hills emerged. These sacred reptiles had pierced unseen the depths of ocean, and announcing their ascent to the surface by throwing up the bluff at Kelung-head, by a number of violent contortions heaved up the regular series of hills, valleys, and plains that extend north and south in varied undulations for the space of 1000 leagues (applied figuratively). The mountain-peaks are too multitudinous to enumerate, and the geography of the island too comprehensive to take into present consideration ; we will therefore confine ourselves to a few general remarks. In rear of the hills, eastward, flows the ocean ; facing them, to the westward, is the sea ; and between lies the prefecture of Taiwan.”
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1887 February, W. Campbell, “A Few Notes from the Pescadores.”, in Chinese Recorder and Missionary Journal, volume XVIII, number 2, Shanghai: American Presbyterian Mission Press, →OCLC, page 62:
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THE PESCADORES, consisting of over twenty inhabited islands, besides several inlets and rocks, lie off the south-western coast of Formosa at a minimum distance of about twenty-five miles, and the entire group is set down on the charts as extending from latitude 23° 12′ to 23° 47′ N., and from longitude 119° 19′ to 119° 41′ E. They form together the Dashing Lake District or Ting, 澎湖廳, of the Taiwan Prefecture, and are placed under the control of resident civil and military mandarins who report to their superior officers at Taiwanfoo.
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1980, Ramon H. Myers, “The Public Sector: The State”, in The Chinese Economy Past and Present, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 78–79:
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In effect each area paid an assigned land tax quota, which was allocated among households — depending upon the amount of land they owned and registered with the land tax office. Households paid this tax in silver, and by 1736 the state collected this kind of land tax in all provinces except Shansi, Taiwan prefecture (part of Fukien province), and Kweichow.
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2016 [2014 April 17], “President Ma Attends "Examining the Diaoyutai/Senkaku Islands Dispute under New and Multiple Perspectives" International Conference”, in Ma Ying-jeou, editor, Chinese (Taiwan) Yearbook of International Law and Affairs, volume 32 (2014), Brill Nijhoff, →ISBN, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 281:
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President Ma further noted that in 1683 during the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) the emperor formally included the Diaoyutais as territory of China in Taiwan Prefecture, Fujian Province. In 1812, the Diaoyutais were placed under the administration of the Kavalan Office of the Taiwan prefectural government, he added, pointing out that the Record of Missions to Taiwan and Adjacent Waters 《臺海使槎錄》 and the Illustrations of Taiwan 《全臺圖説》 prove that China effectively ruled over the Diaoyutai Islets during the Qing Dynasty.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- (historical) A former province of China (Qing Empire) (1885–1895).
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1896, J. D. Clark, Formosa, Shanghai: Shanghai Mercury, →OCLC, page 44:
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In 1885 Governor LIU determined to reconstruct Taipei and make it the temporary capital until, the railway having on its way to Taiwan reached the old town of Changhua, in about the middle of Formosa, he should build a city near that place and make it, under the name of Taiwan, the capital of the province of Taiwan.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- (historical) A former dependency of Japan (1895–1945).
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1902, “Appendix”, in The Isle of Man, Gibraltar, Malta, St Helena, Barbados, Cyrpus, the Channel Islands, the British Army & Navy (The British Empire Series), volume V, →OCLC, page 649:
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- (law) A province of the Republic of China (Taiwan) (from 1945).
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1946 February 16, “China”, in Foreign Commerce Weekly, volume XXII, number 7, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, United States Department of Commerce, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 26, column 2:
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Recent reports from Taiwan (Formosa), although fragmentary, begin to give a picture of economic conditions following the conclusion of the war. Now officially referred to as Taiwan Province, the island's former Japanese administration is being replaced by Chinese officials with little change, at least as yet, in the administrative pattern. Although there is no indication that ideographs will be changed, Chinese readings rather than Japanese will be followed for place names. Taihoku, for example, will be read in our alphabet as Taipei. This city presumably will continue to be the capital of Taiwan.
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1957, Chiang Chung-cheng (Kai-shek), Soviet Russia in China: A Summing-up at Seventy, New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 239–240:
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The Chinese Government today, with its program of local self-government in Taiwan, provides a revealing contrast to the Communist totalitarian "democratic dictatorship" on the mainland. Herein lies the foundation for our eventual victory against Communism.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- (law) The territory currently under the de facto jurisdiction of the Republic of China (Taiwan).
- (disputed) A claimed province of the People's Republic of China (from 1949). [from mid 20th c.]
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1992, Zhou Shunwu (周舜武), “Overview”, in 中国分省地理 [China Provincial Geography], Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 499:
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China (excluding Taiwan Province) has 381 cities as of the end of 1987, including 3 provincial-level cities, 170 provincially administered cities and 208 township-level cities. In addition there are 1,985 counties (including autonomous counties, banners and autonomous banners) in China.
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2011 [1979 January 31], Jimmy Carter, White House Diary, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 286:
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I had my final meeting with Deng Xiaoping. We signed agreements concerning consular offices, trade, science and technology, cultural exchange, and so forth. After discussing the political problems I had in normalization, Zbig asked him, "Did you have political opposition in China?" Everybody listened very carefully when Deng said, "Yes, I had serious opposition in one province in China—Taiwan."
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
- (historical) A former prefecture of Fujian province in China (Qing Empire) (1683–1885).
- (historical) Synonym of Tainan, a city of Taiwan, former capital of Taiwan Province.
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1862 [1859], John E. Ward, “Proclamation of JOHN E. WARD announcing exchange of ratifications of Treaty”, in Treaties between the United States of America and China, Japan Lewchew and Siam, Acts of Congress, and the Attorney-General's Opinion, with the Decrees and Regulations Issued for the Guidance of U.S. Consular Courts in China, Hongkong, →OCLC, page 22:
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1877 November 8, “Robert Swinhoe, F.R.S.”, in Nature, volume XVII, number 419, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 35, column 2:
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In 1860 Mr. Swinhoe attended Gen. Napier, and afterwards Sir Hope Grant, the Commander-in-Chief, as interpreter, and received a medal for war service. At the end of the same year he was appointed Vice-Consul at Taiwan, Formosa, and in 1865 to the full Consulship.
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1885 January 7, “Summary of News”, in North-China Herald and Supreme Court & Consular Gazette, volume XXXIV, number 913, Shanghai, →OCLC, page 4, column 2:
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Evidently the French blockade of Formosa is not very effective, or else the Pescadores are not included in the blockaded district. The Daily Press of 31st December states:—We learn by private letter that there have been no blockading ships at Taiwan or at Takao during the last seven days. The blockade is a purely paper one. Troops and treasure are pouring into South Formosa.
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1896, J. D. Clark, Formosa, Shanghai: Shanghai Mercury, →OCLC, page 44:
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In 1885 Governor LIU determined to reconstruct Taipei and make it the temporary capital until, the railway having on its way to Taiwan reached the old town of Changhua, in about the middle of Formosa, he should build a city near that place and make it, under the name of Taiwan, the capital of the province of Taiwan.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
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- (astronomy) 2169 Taiwan, a main belt asteroid. [from mid 20th c.]
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2019 August 29, “Asteroid 'Taiwan' to come closest to Earth late Thursday: museum”, in Focus Taiwan, archived from the original on 10 September 2022, Science & Tech:
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2169 Taiwan, a carbonaceous asteroid from the central region of the asteroid belt between Jupiter and Mars, will be at its closest to Earth at around 11 p.m. Thursday, the Taipei Astronomical Museum said.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Taiwan.
使用する際の注意点
派生語
- Taiwanese
- Taiwan field mouse
- Taiwan firecrest
- Taiwan flamecrest
- Taiwan pear
- Taiwan Strait
- Taiwan Straits
- Taiwan studies
- West Taiwan
参照
- ^ Campbell, William (1903), “Explanatory Notes”, in Formosa Under the Dutch: Described from Contemporary Records, with Explanatory Notes and a Bibliography of the Island, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Ltd., →ISBN, →LCCN, page 548
- ^ Mair, V. H. (2010), How to Forget Your Mother Tongue and Remember Your National Language
- ^ T'ai-nan, in Encyclopædia Britannica: "T’ai-nan is one of the oldest urban settlements on the island. The Han Chinese settled there as early as 1590 (some sources say earlier), when it was known as T’ai-yüan (Taiyuan), Ta-yüan (Dayuan), or T’ai-wan (Taiwan)—a name that was later extended to the whole island."
- “Taiwan”, in Collins English Dictionary.
- “Taiwan, T'ai-wan, T'aiwan, Tai-wan”, in Google Books Ngram Viewer.
- “Taiwan, pn.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- “Taiwan”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- “Taiwan”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “Taiwan”, in TheFreeDictionary.com, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.: Farlex, Inc., 2003–2026
Further reading
Taiwan on Wikivoyage.Wikivoyage
アナグラム
Weblio例文辞書での「TAIWAN」に類似した例文 |
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taiwan
the Formosan aborigines
タンシチュウ
Old Master.
Tsunagu
Young Master.
ラタニアーヤシ
a Javanese
中国本土.
uj
日中の.
東洋ふう
the shogunate
the Chinese republic
「TAIWAN」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 952件
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