Language Services For Wuxi

Wuxi, a city near Shanghai in eastern China, sits on the banks of Taihu, one of China’s largest freshwater lakes. Surrounding Taihu are walking trails, a 115m-tall Ferris wheel and parks such as Yuantouzhu (Turtle Head Isle). Another major park is Lingshan, whose notable Buddhist sites include the bronze Grand Buddha statue, which is more than 80m high. Covering an area of 4,785 square kilometres (1847.5 square miles), it borders Suzhou to the east, Zhejiang Province to the south and Changzhou to the west. There are six districts and two county-level cities (Jiangyin and Yixing) under its prefecture with a total population of 4.578 million.

Historical, Cultural facts & Religion

Belonging to one of the eight primitive cultural districts in China, Wuxi is a famous cultural city with a history of over 3,000 years. The establishment of the city can be traced back to the end of the Shang Dynasty. Taibo,the eldest son of emperor Zhouwu in the West Zhou Dynasty came here from the inland of China. With fertile soil and rich produce, it is the famous “land teeming with fish and rice” in China. Belonging to one of the eight primitive cultural districts in China, Wuxi is a famous cultural city with a history of over 3,000 years. The establishment of the city can be traced back to the end of the Shang Dynasty.

Brief City  History

Wuxi, Wade-Giles romanization Wu-hsi, city, southern Jiangsu sheng (province), eastern China. It is situated along the Grand Canal at that waterway’s junction with local rivers near the north-eastern corner of Lake Tai. The city is the principal route focus of the dense network of canals and waterways that provides the basic transport system of southern Jiangsu. Wuxi is one of the older cities in the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) delta area. It was originally known as a source of tin, but, by the time the county was founded in 202 BCE under the Xi (Western) Han dynasty (206 BCE–25 CE), the deposits had been exhausted, and the county was named Wuxi (“Without Tin”). From the end of the 3rd century the city was subordinated to the commandery (district under the control of a commander) of Biling (later Changzhou) and remained so except for a brief interval under the rule of the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty (1206–1368), when it was made an independent prefecture.

Since early times the area around Lake Tai has been extremely fertile. After the completion of the Grand Canal in 609, Wuxi became a transshipment centre for tax grain destined for the capital. It thus became one of the greatest grain markets in China, handling vast quantities of rice annually, and was the seat of a complex commercial organization of extremely wealthy merchants and middlemen. When the Grand Canal fell into decay after 1850, Wuxi retained its importance as a rice market, exporting grain to Shanghai, 80 miles (130 km) to the southeast, for shipment by sea to Tianjin to the north. The trade-in grain increased still further after the completion of a railway link to Shanghai and to Zhenjiang and Nanjing to the northwest, in 1908. Wuxi has traditionally been a centre of the textile industry, being engaged in both cotton textiles and silk reeling. Textile mills were established there as long ago as 1894 and silk filatures (establishments for reeling silk) in 1904. This development was largely the work of Shanghai industrialists, many of whom were originally from Wuxi merchant families. The two cities have had unusually close links, and Wuxi was known colloquially before World War II as “Little Shanghai.” The cotton yarn produced was woven not only in the city itself but also in such nearby canal cities as Changzhou (northwest) and Suzhou (southeast), whereas the silk reeled in the city was mostly woven into cloth in Suzhou and (more recently) in Shanghai. Present-day Wuxi is one of the greatest silk-reeling centres in China. Cotton textile production is also important and is the city’s largest single industry.

Language (s) Written & Spoken

Shanghainese is spoken in the city of Wuxi in Jiangsu province of China. It has many similarities with the Shanghainese and Suzhou dialect. It is mutually intelligible with the Changzhou dialect to which it is most closely related. It is not at all mutually intelligible with Mandarin, China’s official language.

Important Types of Commerce in Wuxi

Major industries include high-tech equipment and engineering services, precision machinery, logistics and new materials.

Language Services US and others will provide working with Wuxi

Wuxi has been in a trade relationship with several countries. Because of such close relations, the necessity to learn and understand the Chinese language has increased in importance over the years. This developed the need for Chinese translators and interpreters. Moreover, for businesses planning to tap into Wuxi, in order to maximize the voice of your brand and help them to reach a new Chinese -speaking audience with enormous marketing opportunities in the global market, the next step is to partner with a professional translation and interpretation company.

Looking for a Chinese and Shanghainese translation company? Look no further. American Language Services (AML-Global) offers certified translations, native interpreting services, and turn-key localization solutions for any language. Call us today @ 1-800-951-5020 for further information, visit our website https://www.alsglobal.net/ or for a quick quote click http://alsglobal.net/quick-quote.php.

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