青山

Etymology

 * “psycho”; “psychiatric hospital”
 * From, the first psychiatric hospital in Hong Kong.

Noun

 * 1) green mountains; mountains with lush forests
 * 2)  psycho
 * 3)  psychiatric hospital
 * 1)  psychiatric hospital

Proper noun

 * , renamed to Tuen Mun
 * , renamed to Tuen Mun
 * , renamed to Tuen Mun
 * , renamed to Tuen Mun
 * , renamed to Tuen Mun

Etymology 1


Compound of.

Noun

 * 1) a green lush mountain or mountainous area
 * 2) a type of fancy kamaboko (fishcake) used in ceremonies

Proper noun

 * So named as the land was deeded to Aoyama Tadanari (, d. 1613; Wikipedia article) by Tokugawa Ieyasu (, d. 1616; Wikipedia article)
 * So named as the land was deeded to Aoyama Tadanari (, d. 1613; Wikipedia article) by Tokugawa Ieyasu (, d. 1616; Wikipedia article)
 * So named as the land was deeded to Aoyama Tadanari (, d. 1613; Wikipedia article) by Tokugawa Ieyasu (, d. 1616; Wikipedia article)

Derived terms

 * : the Aoyama chrysanthemum, a family crest

Etymology 2
From. Compare modern 🇨🇬 reading chheng-san, or 🇨🇬 reading qīngshān.

The character is read san ordinarily.

Noun

 * 1) a green lush mountain or mountainous area
 * 2)  a grave or one's final resting place
 * 3) alternate name for the, a four-stringed lute brought to Japan from Tang Dynasty China

Idioms

 * : "lush mountains, a single hair" → the mountains are so far away that they recede into the distance, seeming only as tall as a single hair is wide
 * ; : "wherever people go, there are green mountains", "wherever you go in the world, there are green mountains" → get out and see the world, don't be a homebody