Revision as of 03:40, 10 February 2006 editAppleby (talk | contribs)7,234 edits english "east sea" is based on western usage of "east sea", not korean, just like "sea of japan" is not merely translated from japanese← Previous edit | Revision as of 03:46, 10 February 2006 edit undo130.54.130.68 (talk) no doubt it is from South Korea's local nameNext edit → | ||
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'''East Sea''' may refer to: | '''East Sea''' may refer to: | ||
* ] |
* ], from ]'s local name. In ], it is pronounced Donghae (동해/東海). See: ]. | ||
* ], from ]'s local name. In ], it is pronounced Dong Hai (東海). | * ], from ]'s local name. In ], it is pronounced Dong Hai (東海). | ||
* ], from ]'s local name. In ], it is pronounced Bien Dong (Biển Đông). | * ], from ]'s local name. In ], it is pronounced Bien Dong (Biển Đông). |
Revision as of 03:46, 10 February 2006
East Sea may refer to:
- Sea of Japan, from South Korea's local name. In Korean, it is pronounced Donghae (동해/東海). See: Sea of Japan naming dispute.
- East China Sea, from China's local name. In Mandarin Chinese, it is pronounced Dong Hai (東海).
- South China Sea, from Vietnam's local name. In Vietnamese, it is pronounced Bien Dong (Biển Đông).
- Baltic Sea - the local language names in many countries, eg. German "Ostsee" and Swedish "Östersjön".
- Dead Sea - in The Bible it appears twice, in Ezekiel 47:18 and Joel 2:20
- Tokai region (東海地方) - Japan's local language name for its coastal area along the Pacific Ocean.
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