Yun County could refer to the following locations in China:
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The Blang people are an ethnic group. They form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China.
Tongren is a prefecture-level city in eastern Guizhou province, People's Republic of China, located within a tobacco planting and crop agricultural area. Tongren was known as Tongren Prefecture (铜仁地区) until November 2011, when it was converted into a prefecture-level city.
The Kam language, also known as Gam, or in Chinese, Dong or Tung-Chia, is a Kam–Sui language spoken by the Dong people. Ethnologue distinguishes three Kam varieties as separate but closely related languages.
Yunan may refer to:
Fàn Yun (451–503) was born in Wuyin (舞阴) and lived during the Southern Qi dynasty. He learned to write poems at the age of eight and had a quick wit. He was a personal friend of Emperor Wu; and held authority as Wu's de facto chancellor. Fàn was a member of the elite Fàn family.
Qiemo County as the official romanized name, also transliterated from Uyghur as Qarqan County, is a county under the administration of the Bayin'gholin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China, bordering the Tibet Autonomous Region to the south. Its area is 138,645 square kilometres (53,531 sq mi) and, according to the 2002 census, it has a population of 60,000. The county seat is at Qiemo Town.
Yunyang County is a county in the northeast of Chongqing Municipality, China, bordering Hubei province to the south.
Yunmeng County is a county in eastern Hubei province, People's Republic of China. It is administered by Xiaogan City and is located just outside Xiaogan's urban area.
Zhenan may refer to:
Yun County or Yunxian is a county in the west of Yunnan province, China. It is the easternmost county-level division of the prefecture-level city of Lincang.
Lichuan may refer to the following locations:
Yun'an District is a district of Yunfu, Guangdong province, China. It used to be a county of Yunfu, called Yun'an County, but it has been changed as Yun'an District in 2014. It is located in the western part of Guangdong province, the central area of Yunfu, and the southern side runs the Xi River. It is between 111°43′26″E-112°10′17″E, and 22°34′26″N-23°08′01″N. It borders the seat of Yunfu, called Yuncheng District to the east, Xinxing County and Yangchun to the south, Luoding city and Yunan County to the west, and Xi River and Deqing county to the north.
Yunyang District, formerly Yun County or Yunxian, is a district of Shiyan City in northwestern Hubei province, China. It borders the provinces of Henan and Shaanxi.
Chengbu Miao Autonomous County is an autonomous county of Miao people in the Province of Hunan, China, it is under the administration of Shaoyang City.
The U language, or P'uman 濮满, is spoken by 40,000 people in the Yunnan province of China and possibly Burma. It is classified as an Austroasiatic language in the Palaungic branch. In China, U speakers are classified as ethnic Bulang.
Counties, formally county-level divisions, are found in the third level of the administrative hierarchy in Provinces and Autonomous regions and the second level in municipalities and Hainan, a level that is known as "county level" and also contains autonomous counties, county-level cities, banners, autonomous banner and City districts. There are 1,355 counties in Mainland China out of a total of 2,851 county-level divisions.
Lalo is a Loloish language cluster spoken in western Yunnan, China by 300,000 speakers. Speakers are officially part of the Yi nationality, and Chinese linguists refer to it as "Western Yi" due to its distribution in western Yunnan. Lalo speakers are mostly located in southern Dali Prefecture, especially Weishan County, considered the traditional homeland of the Lalo. Historically, this area is the home of the Meng clan, who ruled the Nanzhao Kingdom (737–902 CE). Many speakers of Core Lalo dialects claim to be descendants of the Meng clan.
Tai Hongjin is a Tai language of southern China. Dialects may not be mutually intelligible.
Mili is a Loloish language spoken in Jingdong County, Yun, Zhenyuan, and Xinping counties of Yunnan province, China. Mili is a variety of Lolopo.
Mong Lem or Mönglem was a Shan state in of what is today the Menglian Dai-Lahu-Va Autonomous County of the Pu'er Prefecture, Yunnan region, China.