Citations:Ji

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English citations of Ji

In Shaanxi[edit]

  • 1985, Frank Leeming, Rural China Today[1], Longman, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 126:
    At a brigade in Ji county in south-eastern Shanxi, not really in mountain country, yields per mou were raised from 56 jin to 194 jin during the 1970s.
  • 2010, Dong Huai, “Hukou Waterfall”, in Discovering China: 50 Amazing Places in China[2], Better Link Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 52:
    Subject of poetry, art and legend, Hukou Waterfall is the second largest falls in China, located on the Yellow River, between Ji County, Shanxi Province and Yichuan County, Shaanixi[sic – meaning Shaanxi] Provine[sic – meaning Province].
  • 2015 [2009], Yu (赵瑜) Zhao, 寻找巴金的黛莉 [Seven Lost Letters]‎[3], Aurora Publishing, →ISBN, →OCLC, page [4]:
    Taiyuan fell, Yan Xishan was defeated and the administration retreated southward, first setting up government in Linfen, later heading east to Ji County, finally coming to rest at Nanpo Village on the eastern bank of the Yellow River.
  • [2020 September 23, Bochen Zhu, “Apple farming in N China embraces long-term sustainability”, in China Internet Information Center[5], archived from the original on 23 September 2020[6]:
    Apple orchards in the city of Linfen, north China's Shanxi province, have been making steady progress toward a model of sustainable farming, helping create important economic opportunities for local farmers.
    The orchards are situated in Jixian county, an area well-known for its history of agriculture.
    ]
  • 2021 July 5, Muyu Xu, Shivani Singh, “China approves a $55 mln gas pipeline in northern China”, in Louise Heavens, editor, Reuters[7], archived from the original on 05 July 2021, Energy‎[8]:
    The 34.2 kilometre (21.3 mile) pipeline, which will be built by Qinjin Natural Gas Co, is designed to have annual gas transmission capacity of 3.3 billion cubic metres and connect Ji county in Shanxi and Yichuan county in Shaanxi.

In Tianjin[edit]

  • 2005, Thomas David DuBois, “Pseudomonastic Sectrarians: The Li Sect in Town and Country”, in The Sacred Village: Social Change and Religious Life in Rural North China[9], Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 107–108:
    After the period of mourning had past, Yang gathered a small number of disciples and traveled north, through Hebei, to the mountains of Ji County, about 100 kilometers north of Tianjin.