Huangtai
Huangtai, pronounced Hu á NGT á I, is a Chinese word, which means the name of Qiu.
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In Qian Qianyi's short song about the story of snow moon in opera, Mu Tianzi said: "the snow flies in the high hills of Huangtai at night, and there is no yaochijie in the west of Baiyun." Gao Lian of Ming Dynasty wrote in the story of Hosta, touan: "Huangtai is free from resentment and free from melons. And spend time in the empty door. " Zhao Yi's poem entitled the portrait of Jiulian Bodhisattva in the Qing Dynasty: "floating catkins are still singing Yang Baihua, picking melons to make Huangtai di." One of Fu Fu's Poems "avoiding the land" is: "the melons and vines are picked again and again from Huangtai, and the willows and white gates are surrounded by three or four." See Huangtai guaci.
Chinese PinYin : Huang Tai
Huangtai