Tan
See also: Appendix:Variations of "tan"
English
editEtymology 1
editProper noun
editTan
- A Chinese surname from Mandarin.
Etymology 2
editFrom Hokkien 陳 / 陈 (Tân). Doublet of Chen.
Proper noun
editTan
- A Chinese surname from Hokkien.
Etymology 3
editFrom Mandarin 丹 (Dān), reinforced by Wade-Giles romanization: Tan¹.
Proper noun
editTan
- Alternative form of Dan
- 1856, Thomas Taylor Meadows, “Military History of the Tae pings, After the Occupation of Nanking, Up to the Present Time”, in The Chinese and their Rebellions[1], London: Smith, Elder & Co., →OCLC, page 175:
- The Tae ping camps commanded the Tan river which, flowing eastward, becomes further on the Wei, under which name it joins the Grand Canal at Lin tsing, on the northern side of the highest level of the Canal waters.
- 1921, Eric Teichman, Travels of a Consular Officer in North-West China[2], Cambridge University Press, →OCLC, →OL, page 214:
- As regards other possible railways in Shensi and Kansu not yet definitely projected, the most attractive is a line from the neighbourhood of Chingtzu Kuan in south-western Honan up the Tan River valley and across the Ch'inling Shan to Hsian.
- 1923, Frits Holm, My Nestorian Adventure in China[3], Fleming H. Revell Company, →OCLC, page 191:
- I was much disappointed at learning that the water was too low for navigation on the Tan river as yet, and that we would have to travel four days over the mountains to Kingtzekuan, on the border of Honan, before we should find the river navigable.
- 1974, Edward Friedman, Backward Toward Revolution: the Chinese Revolutionary Party[4], University of California Press, published 1977, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 152–153:
- In mid-March 1914 the White Wolf band gathered with a number of other rural bands at Ching-tzu-kuan, a cluster of houses at a pass on the Tan river at the Honan-Shensi provincial borders.[...]
They continued through the Tsinling mountains above the Tan river valley on a high trad under yet higher caves where villagers traditionally hide.
Translations
editDan — see Dan
Etymology 4
editProper noun
editTan
- A surname from Vietnamese.
Anagrams
editJapanese
editRomanization
editTan
Tagalog
editEtymology
editBorrowed from Hokkien 陳 / 陈 (Tân). Doublet of Chan and Chen.
Pronunciation
edit- (Standard Tagalog) IPA(key): /ˈtan/ [ˈt̪an̪]
- Rhymes: -an
- Syllabification: Tan
Proper noun
editTan (Baybayin spelling ᜆᜈ᜔)
- a Chinese Filipino surname from Hokkien
Statistics
edit- According to data collected by Forebears in 2014, Tan is the 37th most common surname in the Philippines, occurring in 123,290 individuals.
Turkish
editProper noun
editTan
- a female given name
- a male given name which means "dawn, daybreak"
See also
editCategories:
- English terms derived from Mandarin
- English lemmas
- English proper nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English surnames
- English surnames from Mandarin
- English terms borrowed from Hokkien
- English terms derived from Hokkien
- English doublets
- English surnames from Hokkien
- English terms with quotations
- English surnames from Vietnamese
- Japanese non-lemma forms
- Japanese romanizations
- Tagalog terms borrowed from Hokkien
- Tagalog terms derived from Hokkien
- Tagalog doublets
- Tagalog 1-syllable words
- Tagalog terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Tagalog/an
- Rhymes:Tagalog/an/1 syllable
- Tagalog terms with mabilis pronunciation
- Tagalog lemmas
- Tagalog proper nouns
- Tagalog terms with Baybayin script
- Tagalog surnames
- Tagalog surnames from Hokkien
- Turkish lemmas
- Turkish proper nouns
- Turkish given names
- Turkish female given names
- Turkish male given names