Did you mean: kong kings king gongs kong] konge kongsu kang ?
外企 | wài qǐ | foreign enterprise / company established in mainland China with direct investment from foreign entities or from investors in Taiwan, Macao or Hong Kong / abbr. for 外資企業|外资企业 |
香港 | Xiāng gǎng | Hong Kong, special administrative region (SAR) of the PRC (abbr. to 港[Gang3]) |
新力 | Xīn lì | Sony (former name of the company used prior to 2009 in some markets including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore, now replaced by 索尼[Suo3 ni2] in all markets) |
强国 | Qiáng guó | (ironically) mainland China (Taiwan & Hong Kong usage) |
内地 | Nèi dì | mainland China (PRC excluding Hong Kong and Macau, but including islands such as Hainan) / Japan (used in Taiwan during Japanese colonization) |
九龙 | Jiǔ lóng | Kowloon district of Hong Kong |
全港 | Quán Gǎng | whole territory of Hong Kong |
孔 | Kǒng | surname Kong |
天后 | Tiān hòu | Tin Hau, Empress of Heaven, another name for the goddess Matsu 媽祖|妈祖[Ma1 zu3] / Tin Hau (Hong Kong area around the MTR station with same name) |
港 | Gǎng | Hong Kong (abbr. for 香港[Xiang1gang3]) / surname Gang |
港澳台 | Gǎng Ào Tái | Hong Kong 香港, Macao 澳門|澳门 and Taiwan 臺灣|台湾[Tai2 wan1] |
中环 | Zhōng huán | Central, Hong Kong Island |
信报 | xìn bào | abbr. for 信報財經新聞|信报财经新闻, Hong Kong Economic Journal |
旺角 | Wàng Jiǎo | Mong Kok (area in Hong Kong) |
户口 | hù kǒu | population (counted as number of households for census or taxation) / registered residence / residence permit / (in Hong Kong and Macau) bank account |
金刚 | Jīn gāng | King Kong |
尖沙咀 | Jiān shā zuǐ | Tsim Sha Tsui, urbanized area in Hong Kong |
港珠澳大桥 | Gǎng Zhū Ào Dà qiáo | Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge |
XO酱 | X O jiàng | XO sauce, a spicy seafood sauce invented in Hong Kong in the 1980s |
港元 | gǎng yuán | Hong Kong dollar |
上水 | Shàng shuǐ | Sheung Shui (area in Hong Kong) |
港股 | Gǎng gǔ | Hong Kong shares |
湾仔 | Wān Zǎi | Wan Chai district of Hong Kong |
百胜 | Bǎi shèng | BaiSheng, common name for Chinese company / PakSing, common Hong Kong company name |
小强 | Xiǎo Qiáng | (slang) cockroach ("Little Qiang" was originally the name given to a dead cockroach that had supposedly been a pet of the lead character in the 1993 Hong Kong comedy movie "Flirting Scholar". Subsequently, it came to be used as a name for any cockroach, and also for characters in film and television who are seemingly indestructible or repeatedly resurrected.) |