Sinae
Origin
From , from , q.v. Equivalent to .
Full definition of Sinae
Proper noun
Sinae
(plural Sinaes)- (historical) Synonym of en or Southern Chinese,
- 1773, Alexander MacBean, A Dictionary of Ancient Geography..., s.v. "Sinae":... the outmoſt people to the eaſt, next the Sinus Magnus, and inclining to the ſouth, not to be blended with the Chineſe... Beyond the Sinae to the eaſt, and ſouth was a terra incognita... Iſ. Voſſius takes the Sinae to be the Siameſe; becauſe at this day the appellation Sinae is unknown aamong them; an argument which de Pinedo on Stephanus treats as trifling.
- 1927, Wilfred H. Schoff translating Marcian of Heraclea as Periplus of the Outer Sea..., p. 49:The sailing-course beyond the Ganges to the "country of the Sinae", as stated, would very nearly reach the Gulf of Tong-King.
- 2008, Richard L. Smith, Premodern Trade in World History, p. 111:Exactly which term, "Sinae" or "Serica", equates to the modern China is a bit muddled. Sinae could refer to eastern peninsular Southeast Asia or southern China or both whereas Serica could refer to northern China or Xinjiang and eastern Central Asia or both.