The East Asian monsoon affects large parts of Indo-China, Philippines, China, Korea and Japan.
It is characterised by a warm, rainy summer monsoon and a cold, dry
winter monsoon. The rain occurs in a concentrated belt that stretches
east-west except in East China where it is tilted east-northeast over
Korea and Japan. The seasonal rain is known as Meiyu in China, Changma in Korea, and Bai-u in Japan, with the latter two resembling frontal rain.
The onset of the summer monsoon is marked by a period of premonsoonal
rain over South China and Taiwan in early May. From May through August,
the summer monsoon shifts through a series of dry and rainy phases as
the rain belt moves northward, beginning over Indochina and the South China Sea (May), to the Yangtze River Basin and Japan (June) and finally to North China and Korea (July). When the monsoon ends in August, the rain belt moves back to South China.
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