Burma Road
English
Etymology
From the name of a road in Burma which ran to the frontier with China, built in 1937–1938 by the British in order to circumvent the Japanese blockade of China during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) during World War II.[1]
Noun
Burma Road (plural Burma Roads)
- (figuratively) An important military supply route.
- 2007, Michael Rydelnik, Understanding the Arab-Israeli Conflict: What the Headlines Haven’t Told You, 2nd edition, →ISBN, page 102:
- The Israelis were able to break the stranglehold by bypassing the normal route to Jerusalem through building a “Burma Road” to resupply the city.
References
- See, for example, F. S. Bond (1941 March) “The Railway Section of the Burma Trade Route”, in The Railway Magazine, London: Tothill Press, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 120: “The international trade route known as the Burma Road has assumed a world-wide political significance and has been much in the limelight during the past few months.”
Further reading
- Dwight L. Bolinger (1942 December) “Among the New Words”, in American Speech; republished as John Algeo, editor, Fifty Years Among the New Words: A Dictionary of Neologisms, 1941–1991, Cambridge University Press, 1991, →ISBN, page 93: “Burma Road. The road from Burma to China, used as a military supply-route. +fig. A supply-route of similar nature or importance.”
- “Burma Road”, in Collins English Dictionary.
- “Burma Road”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
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