Gio̍k-san
Tâi-oân siōng koân ê soaⁿ From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Gio̍k-san (Ge̍k-soaⁿ[1], 玉山; Tsou-gí: Patungkuonʉ) sī Tâi-oân tiong-pō͘ Gio̍k-san Soaⁿ-me̍h ê chi̍t-ê niá-thâu, tī Ko-hiông-chhī, Lâm-tâu-koān kap Ka-gī-koān ê kau-kài, sì-chiu-ûi siat ū Gio̍k-san Kok-ka Kong-hn̂g. Gio̍k-san ê kôan-tō͘ tùi hái-pêng-bīn sǹg-khí ū 3952 kong-chhioh, sī Tâi-oân siāng koân ê soaⁿ.
這篇文章有漢字兮版本。 參考這篇文章兮漢字版本。 |
Remove ads
Miâ
Isbukun Bunun-gí hō Gio̍k-san chò Savih; Takbanuaz, Takivatan, Takibakha kap Takitudu kûn ê Bunun-cho̍k hō Saviq, chia jī ê goán ì-sù sī "soaⁿ-téng". Lēng-gōa tī Hoa-lian ê Bunun-lâng mā ū hō i Tonkusqviq.[2] Tī Tsou-gí lāi-bīn, pún soaⁿ sī hō Patungkuanʉ, chit-ê miâ mā sī "Pat-thong-koan" ê gí-goân.[3]
Tī Ji̍t-pún thóng-tī Tâi-oân ê sî-chūn, Gio̍k-san hō chòe "Sin-ko-san" (Ji̍t-pún-gí:
Remove ads
Chham-chiàu
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads