Definition of "Tienanmen"
Tienanmen
proper noun
Alternative form of Tian'anmen
Quotations
The most notable example of engraved dragons is on the stone columns of the Temple to Confucius at his birthplace in Chüfu. These are also found in the "cloud pillars" (single stone columns—huapiao in Chinese) outside the Tienanmen, while those at the Ming Tombs are still finer.
1961, Yutang Lin, “Studies in Form: Temples, Pagodas and the Plastic Arts”, in Imperial Peking: Seven Centuries of China, New York: Crown Publishers, page 125
About 1,000 youths gathered on Changan Street and in the Tienanmen Square in Peiping Saturday night to demand democracy and law, and freedom of speech, Japanese correspondents reported.The crowds, whose members appeared to have an average age of 20, asked the correspondents about the election system, land reform, human rights and press censorship in Japan and about democracy in the United States, and asked how the American President is elected.
1978 December 3, “Mainland youths demand democracy”, in Free China Weekly, volume XIX, number 48, Taipei, page 3
The report also said as many as 70,000 troopers may have moved into the city center by subway and followed connecting tunnels to the walled palace, the history museum and the Great Hall of the People on three sides of the vast Tienanmen Square.
1989 May 21, Nicholas D. Kristof, “UPHEAVAL IN CHINA; BIGGEST BEIJING CROWDS SO FAR KEEP TROOPS FROM CITY CENTER; PARTY REPORTED IN BITTER FIGHT”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 12 August 2010, Section 1, page 1
The government has faith in the US’ democratic institutions and judicial system in the handling of the alleged police killing of an African-American man, and people should not forget the advocates for democracy sacrificed in the Tienanmen Square Massacre 31 years ago, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) said yesterday.
2020 June 5, Yi-hsuan Lu, Dennis Xie, “MOFA reflects on aftermath of protests”, in Taipei Times, archived from the original on 12 June 2020, Front Page, page 1
Chinese President Xi Jinping on a Hongqi limousine at a parade in Tienanmen Square in Beijing.
2022 January 24, Aadil Brar, “Chinese are talking about inequality again just a year after Xi said poverty ended”, in Anurag Chaubey, editor, ThePrint, archived from the original on 24 January 2022, Chinascope
However, things take a dramatic turn when he enters the country in June 1989, a time of political unrest and during the height of the Tienanmen Square student protests, and he finds himself quickly thrown into a battle far bigger than just a game.
2023 February 15, Clarise Larson, “A look before the ‘Leap’”, in Juneau Empire, archived from the original on 15 February 2023