The Tha Chin river has many regional names. After it splits from
Chao Phraya River at
Chai Nat, it is called
Makham Thao River or
Khlong Makham Thao; while passing
Suphan Buri it is the
Suphan River; while passing
Nakhon Pathom it becomes the
Nakhon Chai Si River. Only near its mouth at
Samut Sakhon does it become the Tha Chin River, named after the former name of Samut Sakhon. The name Tha Chin is the convention used in most scientific documents. The name
"Tha Chin" literally means "Chinese pier". More than a thousand years ago, the area where the river now flows, in what is today Samut Sakhon province, was home to a large Chinese community. Their descendants still live there today. For this reason, the area is also known in the
Teochew dialect as
"Leng Kia Chu" (), which means "home of the descendants of the dragon". ==Tributaries==