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{{Names of Da Huang}}
{{Names of Da Huang}}


The '''names of Da Huang''' include the many contemporary and historical appellations given in various languages for the Southeast Ochran nation known as ''Dà Huáng'' (大黄; lit. "Great Yellow") in its national language, [[Standard Pūrvī]]. [[Huang dynasty|Jinae]], the name in Latin for the country, was derived from [[Mutul|Mutli]] in the 16th century and became the de facto common name in the West in the subsequent centuries. Its origin is believed to be derived from the [[Sydalene language|Scipio-Latinic]] word, ''Jiña'', which is traced further back to the [[Tahamaja Empire|Uthire word]], ''Jindā'' (जिन्दा). The general acceptance for the ultimate source of the name Jinae is the Jin word "''Jīn''" ([[Jin language|Jin]]: 金), the [[Jin dynasty|dynasty]]'s name that unified the Jin peninsular in the 3rd century BCE. There are, however, other alternative suggestions for the origin of the word.
The '''names of Da Huang''' include the many contemporary and historical appellations given in various languages for the Southeast Ochran nation known as ''Dà Huáng'' (大黄; lit. "Great Yellow") in its national language, [[Standard Jin]]. [[Huang dynasty|Jinae]], the name in Latin for the country, was derived from [[Mutul|Mutli]] in the 16th century and became the de facto common name in the West in the subsequent centuries. Its origin is believed to be derived from the [[Sydalene language|Scipio-Latinic]] word, ''Jiña'', which is traced further back to the [[Tahamaja Empire|Uthire word]], ''Jindā'' (जिन्दा). The general acceptance for the ultimate source of the name Jinae is the Jin word "''Jīn''" ([[Jin language|Jin]]: 金), the [[Jin dynasty|dynasty]]'s name that unified the Jin peninsular in the 3rd century BCE. There are, however, other alternative suggestions for the origin of the word.

Latest revision as of 11:33, 9 September 2023

Da Huang
Da Huang (Chinese characters).png
"Da Huang" in Simplified (top) and Traditional (bottom) Jin characters
Jin name
Simplified Chinese大黄
Traditional Chinese大黃
Hanyu PinyinDà huáng
Literal meaningGreat Yellow
Common name
Simplified Chinese中国
Traditional Chinese中國
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó
Literal meaningMiddle or Central State
Kra (Lao)—Zhuang name
Chinese中原白珞大国
Hanyu PinyinZhōngyuán Báiluò Dàguó
Literal meaningAnachak Kang Hom Khao lit.
The Middle Kingdom and the White Parasol
Zhuang name
ZhuangCunghgoz
Lao name
Laoອະນະຈັກຄາງຮົ່ມຂາວ

The names of Da Huang include the many contemporary and historical appellations given in various languages for the Southeast Ochran nation known as Dà Huáng (大黄; lit. "Great Yellow") in its national language, Standard Jin. Jinae, the name in Latin for the country, was derived from Mutli in the 16th century and became the de facto common name in the West in the subsequent centuries. Its origin is believed to be derived from the Scipio-Latinic word, Jiña, which is traced further back to the Uthire word, Jindā (जिन्दा). The general acceptance for the ultimate source of the name Jinae is the Jin word "Jīn" (Jin: 金), the dynasty's name that unified the Jin peninsular in the 3rd century BCE. There are, however, other alternative suggestions for the origin of the word.