Sinese

Etymology
From, from + , from  + , from , from. Equivalent to.

Noun

 * 1)  The Chinese people or a Chinese person,  with reference to the historical southern Chinese known to the Greeks and Romans as the Sinae.
 * 2) * 1878, Thomas Rawson Birks translating Franz Delitzsch's citation of Neumann in his Commentary on the Book of Isaiah, p. 247:
 * The name Θῖναι, Strabo, Σῖναι, Ptol., Τζίνιτζα, Kosmas, did not obtain currency first from the founder of the dynasty Tsin; but, long before this, Tsin was the name of a feudal kingdom in Shensi, one of the western provinces of the Sinese land, and Feitsa, the first feudal King of Tsin, began to reign as early as 897.

Adjective

 * 1)  Of or relating to the Sinae or their homeland.