New American Oxford Dictionary
Qing
Qing |CHiNG tʃɪŋ |(also Ch'ing ) a dynasty established by the Manchus that ruled China 1644 –1912. Its overthrow in 1912 by Sun Yat-sen and his supporters ended imperial rule in China.
Qingdao
Qing dao |ˈCHiNGˈdou ˈtʃɪŋˈdaʊ | a port in eastern China, in Shandong province on the Yellow Sea coast; pop. 2,654,300 (est. 2006 ).
Qinghai
Qing hai |ˈCHiNGˈhī ˈtʃɪŋˈhaɪ |(also Tsinghai ) a mountainous province in north central China; capital, Xining.
qinghaosu
qing hao su |ˌCHiNGgouˈso͞o ˌtʃɪŋ (ɡ )əˈoʊˌsu | ▶noun a terpene-based anti-malarial substance used in Chinese medicine. [The drug is obtained from Artemisia annua, family Compositae. ] ORIGIN 1970s: from Chinese qīnghāosù, from qīnghāo, denoting a medicinal plant of the genus Artemisia .
Oxford Dictionary
Qing
Qing |tʃɪŋ |(also Ch'ing ) a dynasty established by the Manchus that ruled China 1644 –1912. Its overthrow in 1912 by Sun Yat-sen and his supporters ended imperial rule in China.
Qingdao
Qingdao |tʃɪŋˈdaʊ | a port in eastern China, in Shandong province on the Yellow Sea coast; pop. 2,654,300 (est. 2006 ).
Qinghai
Qinghai |tʃɪŋˈhʌɪ |(also Tsinghai ) a mountainous province in north central China; capital, Xining.
qinghaosu
qing hao su |ˌCHiNGgouˈso͞o ˌtʃɪŋ (ɡ )əˈoʊˌsu | ▶noun a terpene-based anti-malarial substance used in Chinese medicine. [The drug is obtained from Artemisia annua, family Compositae. ] ORIGIN 1970s: from Chinese qīnghāosù, from qīnghāo, denoting a medicinal plant of the genus Artemisia .