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Food in Sabah
Sabah abounds in all kinds of delicious food. Fruits include durian, rambutan, snakeskin, honey carambola, mangosteen and mango. Among fruits, durian is the most worth tasting.

Other delicacies: beef offal noodles with various beef parts, gourmet bak Kut teh, sweet coconut milk rice, tiger shrimp, lobster, curry rice noodles, fish head rice noodles, cheap and affordable miscellaneous vegetable rice.

Sabah is the second largest state in Malaysia, located in the east of Malaysia and the north of Borneo.

Sabah enjoys the reputation of being a land under the wind or land below the wind, because typhoons do not pass through the Philippines. The capital of Sabah is Kota Kinabalu. Other major towns are Scientology, Lanao, Kenninggao, beaufort, Kudat, Semporna, Nadu, Thouarin, Lahad Dato Shiba. 1984, the Labuan state government, composed of the People's Party led by Harris, was handed over to the federal government. It is now a federal territory and the only offshore financial center in Malaysia.

Lushan Mountain, the highest peak in Southeast Asia, Na Ba (also known as Widow Mountain in China, commonly known as Shenshan Mountain) is located in the inland area on the east coast of Sabah, with an altitude of 4,095 meters. There is a touching love story about this mountain, and it is also the legendary land of souls of Du Sun/Kadazan people. The state capital is also named after her. Kota means "city", and the Chinese name Kota Kinabalu comes from "API-API" [1].

There are 32 kinds of indigenous people living here, among which the Dushun people/Qatari mountain people are the main believers in Christianity and Catholicism, and others are Bayao people (mainly Muslims) and Murut people. They celebrate Tadau Kaamatan every May, and the official holidays are May 30th and May 3rd1. /kloc-A large number of Chinese immigrated here in the 20th century, mainly from Hakka, Guangfu, chaozhou people, Fujian, Hainanese and some people from Tianjin and Hubei in the 20th century.

Although land transportation is convenient and people rarely rely on train services, Sabah still retains the only train track in Borneo, from Tanjung Ya Road Railway Station in Kota Kinabalu to Tannan in the inland province. Because of the vast territory and mountains, the aviation system is more important. Some places need to be reached by water, and these places also lack good water and electricity supply.