A MAJOR survey in China has produced alternate names for some of Scotland's top tourist attractions.

And the Willow Tea Rooms was one of the favoured places.

The results came after 10 weeks of voting across China, and the results of VisitBritain's £1.6 million 'Great names for Great Britain' campaign show 23 points of interest across Scotland along with their new Mandarin names.

The Style Mile in Glasgow has been renamed the 'Fashion long street' and Culzean Castle has been given the name, 'Dream castle on the cliff'.

And The Willow Tea Rooms were renamed, the always happy tea room.

The campaign reached nearly 300 million potential Chinese tourists via the national tourism agency's influential Weibo and WeChat platforms across China.

More than two million people visited the campaign pages and nearly 30 million Chinese people watched the launch video, with 13,000 new names suggested throughout the ten weeks.

Glen Coe (splendid and beautiful valley) received the third highest number of votes overall -24,505 - in the whole campaign, while The Highland Games (Strong man skirt party) was the most popular Scottish point of interest to name, with a total of 235 suggestions.

Among the other quirky names are:

€¢ Kilt - Ke Te Duan Qun - Ke-te short skirt (Homophone for "kilt")

€¢ Malt Whisky Trail - Xiang Jiu Xiang - Fragrant liqueur lane

€¢ Haggis - Mie Mie Bu Ding - Baa-baa pudding

€¢ The National Wallace Monument - Yong Zhe Xin Bei - Monument to brave heart

€¢ Culzean Castle - Huan Jing Xuan Ya Bao (幻境悬崖堡) - Dream castle on the cliff

€¢ Balmoral Castle & Estate -Wei Ai Cheng Bao - One True Love Castle (sounds like Victoria I)

€¢ Loch Ness Monster - Ni Si Mei Ying - Phantom of Loch Ness

€¢ Loch Lomond & the Trossachs National Park - Shan Hu Huai Bao Zui Meng Xiang -

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