Phnom Penh
or Pnom Penh, Pnom-penh, Pnom·penh
[ nom pen, puh-nawm pen ]
/ ˈnɒm ˈpɛn, pəˈnɔm ˈpɛn /
noun
a city in and the capital of Cambodia, in the S part.
Definition for phnom penh (2 of 2)
Cambodia
[ kam-boh-dee-uh ]
/ kæmˈboʊ di ə /
noun
a republic in SE Asia: formerly part of French Indochina. 69,866 sq. mi. (180,953 sq. km). Capital: Phnom Penh.
Formerly
People's Republic of Kampuchea,
Khmer Republic.
OTHER WORDS FROM Cambodia
pro-Cam·bo·di·a, adjectiveBritish Dictionary definitions for phnom penh (1 of 2)
Cambodia
/ (kæmˈbəʊdɪə) /
noun
a country in SE Asia: became part of French Indochina in 1887; achieved self-government in 1949 and independence in 1953; civil war (1970–74) ended in victory for the Khmer Rouge, who renamed the country Kampuchea (1975) and carried out extreme-radical political and economic reforms resulting in a considerable reduction of the population; Vietnamese forces ousted the Khmer Rouge in 1979 and set up a pro-Vietnamese government who reverted (1981) to the name Cambodia; after Vietnamese withdrawal in 1989 a peace settlement with exiled factions was followed in 1993 by the adoption of a democratic monarchist constitution restoring Prince Sihanouk to the throne. The country contains the central plains of the Mekong River and the Cardamom Mountains in the SW. Official language: Khmer; French is also widely spoken. Currency: riel. Capital: Phnom Penh. Pop: 15 205 539 (2013 est). Area: 181 000 sq km (69 895 sq miles)
British Dictionary definitions for phnom penh (2 of 2)
Phnom Penh
Pnom Penh
/ (ˌpnɒm ˈpɛn) /
noun
the capital of Cambodia, a port in the south at the confluence of the Mekong and Tonle Sap Rivers: capital of the country since 1865; university (1960). Pop: 1 174 000 (2005 est)
Official transliteration: Phnum Péhn
Cultural definitions for phnom penh
Cambodia
Nation in Southeast Asia; bordered by Laos to the north, Vietnam to the east, the Gulf of Siam to the south, and Thailand to the west and north. Phnom Penh is its capital and largest city.
notes for Cambodia
Part of French-ruled
Indochina until 1946, it then became self-governing. It was granted full independence in 1953.
notes for Cambodia
The Japanese occupied Cambodia during
World War II.
notes for Cambodia
It was a major battleground of the
Vietnam War.
notes for Cambodia
In 1975, Cambodian
communists, called the
Khmer Rouge, occupied Phnom Penh and then forcibly expelled most of its population to work in the countryside. More than one million Cambodians died at the hands of the Khmer Rouge, either by outright execution or because of forced labor and deprivation.
notes for Cambodia
In 1979, Vietnam invaded Cambodia and installed a puppet government. In 1989, Vietnamese troops withdrew from Cambodia.