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Home > Name of China in various languages


 

The different usages of China in world languages generally derives from two sources, according to how knowledge of China reached the culture, whether by:

The fact that there exists several different conceptions of what China is in the first place also complicates the situation. For example, Chinese people carefully make the distinction between China proper inhabited by ethnic Han Chinese, or what is often referred to simply as "Chinese" outside of China, and China, which also includes Tibetans, Uighurs, Zhuang, Yanbianese Koreans, Mongols, and ManchuThe Manchu manju in Manchu; ( pinyin: mnzu) in Chinese, often shortened to ( pinyin: mn)) are an ethnic group who originated in northeastern Manchuria. They conquered the Ming Dynasty in the 17th century and founded the Qing Dynasty, which ruled China unts, and many other ethnic groups. On the other hand, many others, especially those advocating independence or greater autonomy for TibetThis article is on Historic Tibet. Tibet" can also refer to the Tibet Autonomous Region. Tibet ( Tibetan : , (Bod) pronounced Po, Chinese: , pinyin: Xizang) is a region of Central Asia and the home of the Tibetan people. With an average elevation of 4,900 and other non- Han Chinese regions, tend to equate China with China proper.

1 Han Chinese names

In modern China, the term Zhongguo is used to refer to all of China, including China proper, Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, and Tibet. By contrast, Han refers to the Han Chinese ethnic group, who are mostly concentrated in China proper, Manchuria, and only parts of the other 3 regions. There is no general Chinese term for just China proper, or just the territories inhabited by Han Chinese.

Zhonghua is a more literary term used synonymously with Zhongguo; it appears in the official names of both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China. Tang is used synonymously with Han among southern Chinese, though some restrict the term further to refer to just Cantonese or some other south Chinese language group.

1.1 Zhongguo

Middle Kingdom (中國/中国 pinyin: zhongguó) in Mandarin

The Chinese traditionally positioned the emperor of China at the center of the world, conceiving concentric rings that extends from the cultural center to barbarlic borderlands. This notion was accepted in Korea, Vietnam and other countries to some degree, but not in the "northwestern crescent" that includes Mongolia, Turkestan and Tibet. They did not have terms to refer to this concept in the first place. The ROC and PRC impose it on them either by literal translation or transliteration. This word can be trace back as early as Zhou dynasty.



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