Shumchun

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From the Postal Romanization of Cantonese 深圳 (sam1 zan3).

Proper noun[edit]

Shumchun

  1. (dated) Synonym of Shenzhen: the Cantonese-derived name.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Shumchun.
    • 1941, Leon Bryce Bloch, Lamar Middleton, editors, The War Over in 1940[1], New York: Living Age Press, →OCLC, page 691:
      2 Two thousand Japanese troops are concentrated at Shumchun, railroad town opposite Hong Kong border.
      [...]5 Chinese say they have recovered control of the railway from Sheklung to Shumchun. Reports also are that the Japanese have transferred many troops to the Indo-China border.
    • 1973, Harrison E. Salisbury, To Peking—and Beyond: A Report on the New Asia[2], Quadrangle Books, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 15:
      I looked through the slit, focusing my binoculars as directed by the chief of the Hong Kong defense battalion, and saw through the lens the grim visage of People’s Liberation Army soldiers on guard on their side of the Lo Wu Bridge, the Shumchun side, behind their barbed wire. The year was 1966, and China was tense with the exploding Cultural Revolution.
    • 2013 November 5, “The past in a different country: Australian expats share memories of living in China”, in Australian Broadcasting Corporation[3], archived from the original on 06 November 2013:
      After entry, then the first taste of Chinese hospitality and the privileged treatment accorded to arriving foreigners.
      A jovial English-speaking host walked you along the Shumchun (Shenzhen) railway platform and up a stairway to a restaurant where you were offered a multi-course tasty meal, and saw the first evidence of China's doctrine of self-sufficiency. No Coca Cola here, the soft drink was different in taste, sugar-heavy.
    • 2018, Paul French, City of Devils[4], Picador, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 118:
      Cabbage Moh, a Cantonese smuggler and drug dealer from triad-controlled Shumchun on the Hong Kong border, sees an opportunity to the north and opens dens supplying dope and philopon ferried up the Soochow Creek and distributed out of Fah Wah Village, adjacent to the new sin strip.