Chheng-Chōng Ko-gôan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chheng-Chōng Ko-gôan (Hàn-jī: 青藏高原; Tibet-bûn: བོད་ས་མཐོ, Wylie: Bod Sa mTho; Chōng-gí pheng-im: Pösamto) sī Tang A-chiu, Lâm A-chiu kap Tiong A-chiu tiong-kan ê tōa-hêng koân-phiâⁿ tē-khu, sī sè-kài siōng koân ê koân-phiâⁿ, pêng-kin hái-poa̍t 4500 kong-chhioh, bīn-chek 250 bān pêng-hong kong-lí, “Sè-kài Chhù-chit”, “Soat-he̍k Ko-goân” kap “Tē-saⁿ Kek”. I lâm-pak iân-sin beh 1,000 kong-lí, tang-sai iân-sin beh 2,500 kong-lí. Kóng-gī siōng ê Chheng-Chōng ko-gôan pau-koat i sì-kho͘-liàn-tńg sòaⁿ-beh, chhiūⁿ i tang-pō͘ ū chhun kàu Hoâiⁿ-toān Soaⁿ-me̍h, lâm-pêng sī Himalaya Soaⁿ-me̍h lâm-chhek, sai-pêng ū Pamir koân-phiâⁿ, pak-pêng sī Khun-lûn Soaⁿ-me̍h.
Pún bûn-chiuⁿ ê ū chi̍t pō͘-hūn sī hoan-e̍k Hàn-gí Wikipidia bāng-ia̍h“青藏高原”(Goân chok-tsiá tī-leh i ê siu-tēng-sú). |
Chèng-tī-siōng, Chheng-Chōng ko-gôan tāi-pō͘-hūn lóng sio̍k-tī Tiong-kok Se-chōng Chū-tī-khu kap Chheng-hái-séng. I mā ū hâm-kài Tiong-kok Sin-kiong Uyghur Chū-tī-khu, Kam-siok-séng, Sù-chhoan-séng kap Hûn-lâm-séng ê chi̍t-pō͘-hūn, koh ū hâm-kài Kashmir, Ìn-tō͘ (Ladakh), Bhutan, Nî-pô-lô, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan kap Kyrgyzstan téng-téng.