Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Chinese Class - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Living in China

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Living in China

Living in China Wiki Intro

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Contributors: roddy
Created by roddy, 12th July 2007 at 10:14 PM
Last edited by roddy, 12th July 2007 at 10:14 PM
18 Comments , 10733 Views

Discussion

Articles in Living in China
There are 17 articles in Living in China.

A

* Accessing Cash
* Accessing Credit Cards and Personal Checks

C

* City Guide for Sichuan (四川) Province
* City Guide for Yunnan (云南) Province

E

* Expats-sites

G

* Guide to Beijing (北京)

G (cont.)

* Guide to Dalian (大连)
* Guide to Hong Kong (香港)
* Guide to Nanjing (南京)
* Guide to Shanghai (上海)

L

* Living in China

M

* Mobile Phones

R

* Renting an Apartment

T

* Travel: Buying Tickets Online

V

* Visa: China Visas from Hong Kong
* Visa: Introduction to Chinese visas

W

* Wikipedia access in China

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Learn to speak Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 9th April 2008, 01:09 PM

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Server Issues

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Posted By roddy

Re: Server Issues

I flicked past the DVD numerous times in Xinjiekou DVD stores (are they still there? Happy times)
but never actually felt desperate enough to buy it . . .

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 8th April 2008, 10:16 PM

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Server Issues

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Posted By roddy

Server Issues

Hosting company are suffering an outbreak of rats in their server room, and this is causing some
problems accessing the site - it seems to be ok just now, but the last hour (specifically 9:27
to...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Pinyin - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 17th April 2006, 03:56 AM

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What other languages do we speak

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Posted By cp11141

Native: greek Fairly fluent: english Used to be...

Native: greek
Fairly fluent: english
Used to be fluent: french

Beginner: chinese (studying on and off)
Just started: russian, german
Plans to start: spanish (but quite easy to read already)

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Chinese language - Grammar and sentence structure explanation needed - Page 5 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

Grammar and sentence structure explanation needed
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skylee -

Quote:

1B)
in this case does the word 那 in the beginning of the second phrase refer to the birthday party?
Basicly "On saturday we'll have birthday party preparation" ("Birthday party we saturday have a
preparation")? Could 那 be placed on somewhere else in the second sentence, or if it were
replaced with 生日晚会 could it then be placed for example in the end of the sentence?

Here, 那 is the short form of 那麽, which translates to "then".

Quote:

2)
时间过得真快
This is propably a fixed phrase? What function 得 has in this sentence? Does it mean something
itself or is it used together with 过 to form some new meaning or change meaning of 过 some how?

No, it is not a fixed phrase. Take a look at this thread -> Grammar #3 的得地

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Sebasti -

Quote:

Here, 那 is the short form of 那麽, which translates to "then".

is that 那麽 same with 那末?

Could 再 be used in this case to indicate "then" aswell?

renzhe -

Quote:

I could as well say 开一个生日晚会 but in these cases the 一 can simply be dropped out?

Yes, the 一 was simply dropped.

那麽 = traditional form of 那么. Think of this "那" as "then", "if that's the case, then...".
It connects the previous sentence with the current one.

- We're having a party on Sunday
- Then we'll have to prepare on Saturday.

Quote:

Could 再 be used in this case to indicate "then" aswell?

No, because 再 is used when you perform one action immediately after another one. The "then" here
is not temporal (you can't prepare on Saturday AFTER you have the party on Sunday), it has the
meaning "well, then...", or "if that is so, then..."

And 得 is the particle that connects a verb with an adjective (V + 得 + Adj), where the
adjective describes the verb.

You should read the link skylee posted for more information.

Sebasti -

Thanks again guys for very helpful answers

Quote:

那麽 = traditional form of 那么.

how 那末 compares to above? My dictionary indicates 那末 also means "then"

Then yet again new questions:

1)
来不及吧,会迟到的"maybe there's not enough time. you will be late"
Does 吧 indicate "maybe" as well as many other things?
Why there is 的 in the end? It feels more like something that should have 吧 or 了to me. Can
someone explain?

2)
上课来得及 vs 九点上课
I've understood that time needs to be before the verb. However in first case the verb is before
time indication. Does 来得及 and 莱不及 grammaticaly differ from other time indications such
as date, time of clock?

renzhe -

Quote:

how 那末 compares to above? My dictionary indicates 那末 also means "then"

那末 is more spoken, and only has the meaning of "then". 那么 can also mean "that", for
example: "那么多!?", meaning "THAT much?!"

But don't take my word for it, I'm not 100% sure here.

来不及 and 来得及 are phrases using complements, so you should look into that in your
grammar book or search on here. It's a bit strange that a textbook would introduce these concepts,
translate them, and not explain the grammar behind them, to be honest. Another common example is
"听不懂", "I can't understand".

They mean "there's no time" and "there's still time". So they are not indications of time, they
don't tell you WHEN something happens, they describe the action. That's why they don't come at the
beginning.

吧 here is a question particle you use when you are unsure that something is a certain way and
are asking for a confirmation.

来得及吗? = Is there enough time? (you don't know, you're asking)
来得及吧? = There's enough time, right? (you suspect this is the case, but want confirmation)

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Speak Chinese - Visa for non-degree course - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Living in China

Visa for non-degree course
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whitekblackq -

Hi there,

I am thinking of enrolling in a non-degree course at a university. I already have a 3 yr multiple
entry visa so I understandably don't want to give it up. But if I go to China and enroll at a
university program they will probably force me to change the visa to a student visa. This visa
will be for a shorter period of time, and maybe afterwards I won't be able to get a 3yr again?? Or
do you think it's possible they won't care about changing the official status of the tourist visa?

Many thanks.

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self-taught-mba -

Short-term study is allowed on visas even if not "student visas".

whitekblackq -

So you don't think they'll force me to change my tourist visa to a student visa? That's
interesting.

self-taught-mba -

Well you didn't say how long you'll be studying. And I doubt it.

stephanhodges -

I have a friend in class from America here with a multi-entry 1 year visa (don't know how the
person got it), and that person has had no problems after almost a year now.

Of course, my friend does need to exit and reenter based upon maximum stay per visit (which I
"think" is three months per visit).

We go to HIT in Harbin (northeast China).

I have a 1 year residence permit (which is unlimited entries) because I prepaid 1 year of
schooling. HIT will assist in getting visas (last I checked) up to 4 years this way, if you prepay
the tuition for the entire period.

If it's a worry, negotiate with the school before giving them money. All the schools I've dealt
with are reasonable. They want your cash IMO

muyongshi -

I think they will let you keep it. One of the foreign students at my university right now is still
on the 6 month F visa he got and as the expiration is coming he's trying to change it but they
didn't force him to change it at all. Just communicate to the university that your visa is already
taken care of.

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Chinese Studies - Guò in the song "Kanguolai" - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

Guò in the song "Kanguolai"
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LuBaerte -

Dear friends,

I just learned the great song "duibian de nuhai kanguolai" by Richie Ren, and I was wondering what
exactly the function is of the particle "guo" 过 in this phrase. Does kanguolai mean "come and
see" and why guo here?

thanks a lot!
Lu Baerte

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calibre2001 -

guolai is a word meaning 'come over here' or 'over here' in this case. Thus kan guolai means 'look
over here/ look towards here'.

HSC -

I think that when guòlái is used after a verb it denotes a successful completion of that verb.
So, kànguòlái means that I saw (her), I managed to see her, I got a look.

'Look here' would be more like: cháo zhèr kàn (yixià).

calibre2001 -

The title of the song, when translated, is loosely the equivalent of saying ‘ Hey girl who lives
opposite, look here/look at me/us!’

Yes ‘guo’ can denote a sort of past tense, but not really in this case. Guolai is a word on
its own.

It’s more important to read the words rather than characters individually.

By the way, here’s the original singer whose version is way better than Richie Ren’s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HE_b0c6Qr34

monto -

过来:
过来 alone means "come over here"
When it follows a verb, just "over here" or some thing similar. It is quite frequently used this
way. For examples
快跑过来
把球踢过来
把东西拿过来
把人领过来
把信寄过来
把图片传过来 。。。。。。 many, many.

Also there is usage of 过来: <verb> +过来 <same verb>+过去,indicating the acting is
repeated. For example
看过来,看过去,也没看出什么门道儿。
在房间里走过来走过去,思考着这个问题。
这个问题就像皮球一样,在各部门间被踢过来踢过去,没人去解决。

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Chinese School - BLCU vs. BeiDa, application help - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools > Studying

Chinese in Beijing
BLCU vs. BeiDa, application help
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sirena3 -

I'm a graduate student interested in enrolling for a Chinese Language Course at Peking University.
I looked at Beida's website and I could only find a short-term application form, I am wondering if
there's a different one because I'm interested in enrolling for a 1 year Chinese Language Course
(setember 2008). Also what are the tuition fees for a full year course? To apply, is it only that
form that I need to submit?

From what I know of my friend that went to Beida last year, she had to fill out a short term form
twice..once at her home country and afterwards while at Beida.

Also, what offers a better language course overall? BLCU or Beida? Because I have friends at both
but they each have their own opinion..BLCU seems to be more 'relaxed' while Beida seems more
academic..

Any help/advice would be appreciated!!

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raymond23 -

I'm currently in BLCU.... so my opinion might be a little basis.

I've visited both schools before I came to Beijing and I chose BLCU because the school is focused
in teaching languages.

Aside from other differences in the two schools... I would recommend BLCU because if you need a
tutor for example, there are domestic students in BLCU that is majoring in language education. My
tutor is currently a graduate in teaching Chinese to foreign students, which is great for me
because while she's not like my teacher, she is able to point out most of my flaws in Chinese with
reasonable explanations.

While I'm not saying Beida isn't good for Chinese course, I'm just saying that the atmosphere in
BLCU is more geared to teaching the language, Chinese, to foreign students.

naonao -

I'm Japanese and I am going to study Chinese in BLCU in 2008 fall .

Based on my knowledge in Japan, it is difficult to apply Beida 1 year course now.
I heard the deadline of Beida 1 year course is March 31.
Beida also does not allow application from Japanese.
It only allows application from institution which arranges study in china.

If you are beginner, Beida is not good.
Some friends who study in Beijing said that Beida has very few classes for beginer and these
classes are not good.
If you want to study other theme using Chinese,
I guess Beida is good for you.

amphivera -

If you are considering Beida's 08 language program and haven't submitted your application yet, you
should email them ASAP to find out if there's space left. Their program typically fills up way in
advance of their published deadline and when I talked to one of the program administrator's 3
weeks ago, she'd told me there were few spaces left.

As people have mentioned, the big difference between the Beida program and BLCU is that Beida
doesn't accept pure beginners into their program. You need to have an HSK or make a declaration
that you know at least 800 words.

I should add that if anyone does end up applying to Beida you need to include in your application
a signed form stating you understand that they are not responsible for providing housing. It's a
form that, as far as I know, was not included in the downloadable application forms. Also, a
reminder that your guarantor needs to not only be a Chinese citizen but a Beijing resident. I was
ignorant of this but the Beida people were nice and contacted me right away so I could get the
issue fixed pretty quickly. I can see how this would be a challenge for anyone without contacts in
China, let alone Beijing.

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese language - Outstanding Chinese fiction? - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Art and Literature

Outstanding Chinese fiction?
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Page 2 of 2 &lt; 1 2

skylee -

According to the sina list in #10, the most popular Chinese writer alive is Louis Cha. And the
most popular one ever is Cao Xueqin. I like the list.

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Lu -

Quote:

红楼梦 It is suprisingly modern (especially in theme, but also in language) and there is an
excellent translation in Penguin Paperbacks. However, it is several volumes long.
Forget 围城 in my opinion. There have to be better modern novels out there! I for one enjoyed
骆驼祥子 (Rickshaw Boy) or any of Lu Xun's short stories. How about the Good Earth by Pearl
Buck?

While the Honglou Meng is a great book, it is very, very difficult to read. I read a few pages in
a class in my 5th year of studying Chinese, and there was not one sentence that I could understand
without extensive help of the teacher.

The Good Earth is a good book, but not a Chinese book (written by an American writer in English),
so not sure if that qualifies.

I second Lu Xun, but think Huozhe is easier.

Edit: I love the diversity of that list! Internet writers next to ancient philosophers and modern
poets.

wthru -

i love reading chinese novels though im not a chinese. l've read "the marred face" by 鬼古女,
Zhu Xian (kungfu fiction), Narcissuss by Zhang Yue Ran. all of them are translated into my
language, vietnamese or english. now i desire to read more but cant find the english version of
them such as "Ball Lightning (球状闪电) by 刘慈欣, Gui chui deng.....

anybody can recommend me a website or where can i read all of these novels in english version?
thks alot in advance

Sam Addington -

You guys are the best.

I for one was very pleased to see Chairman Mao on the list at 38! When I was a student of Chinese
back in 1976 my professor (who knows what his history was!) copied all the texts of Chairman Mao
by hand and handed them out to the class. For me, his handwriting (my professor's ... not Mao,
though his calligraphy is also beautiful) will always be the standard by which I judge the
handwriting of others, but I will also always enjoy the words of the Chairman. (I suspect his
popularity will wane as people of my generation start to die off ....).

I was also pleased to see Confucius high on the list. He beats out Laozi, though I doubt he would
in the West. (I recently came across Tzu, Lao in an American index. I got a good laugh out of that
... )

Unfortunately, I cannot connect all the author's names to their works or vice-versa. Another book
I thought of recommending to our friend was "Journey to the West" 西游记 but there is no good
English translation of the book (to my mind). It is also a bit difficult to read, though I had a
great time trying to translate some of the first poems in the book. Talk about elaborate fantasies
that put the Hobbit, for example, to shame. I should have placed a caveat on 红楼梦 as well ...
you have to wade through some mean poetry to get to the meat. But the meat is well worth it. And
David Hawkes translation is without parallel. I see that book is at the top of both Skylee's list
and Rob's list.

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Chinese Class - Retroflex r in American English and Mandarin - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

Retroflex r in American English and Mandarin
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Prase -

Spun off from this discussion.

Many speakers have retroflex r, just not so strong as in Mandarin. The Mandarin one is IMO often
closer to retroflex Z.

There are not any words that highlight it, some people simply use retroflex r everywhere. It is
recognisable, the retroflex one sounds stronger. There is also a way to test it on yourself:

Quote:

A way to test this to make sure is to make the r sound at the beginning of a word (like "red"),
but hold the r. Next, take a pencil or toothpick and slide it into your mouth until it touches
your tongue. If it touches the bottom of your tongue, you're retroflex. If it touches the top,
bunched.

-Ben

(quoted from http://www.omniglot.com/forum/viewto...r=asc&amp;start=30 )

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Prase -

So, if your r is retroflex, these two things could work (it depends on how much retroflex it is,
though):
To get mandarin r, take your r and move your tongue up (and maybe also front) a little.
To get pinyin sh, start with r and press your tongue up (front) and make the sound unvoiced.

I wonder if it works or not. If you have retroflex r, you can try it.

renzhe -

Quote:

Many speakers have retroflex r, just not so strong as in Mandarin. The Mandarin one is IMO often
closer to retroflex Z.

I think that this is the crucial difference. The Mandarin r sounds like a cross between the
"American" retroflex r and the ending of the French word "mirage". If you use the American "r",
you sound like, well, an American

Then again, there are Chinese people who seem to roll their r, or "v" their "w", so there are
variations

Actually, thinking about it, the -er suffix in er hua sounds exactly like the American retroflex
r. But not the initial. It's really complicated. I just try to emulate what I hear and it seems to
work well

Prase -

Quote:

The Mandarin r sounds like a cross between the "American" retroflex r and the ending of the French
word "mirage". If you use the American "r", you sound like, well, an American

That is what I said in the sentence you quoted, I said more precisely retroflex Z. There is not
any hard boundary between aproximants and fricatives. Fricatives are just more constricted, so the
air makes noise.
Retroflex Z: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:V..._fricative.ogg
For example Russian Ж: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_alphabet

renzhe -

You are right, I was just translating it to myself, cause I'm really not that up to speed with the
terminology you're using.

atitarev -

Quote:

I think that this is the crucial difference. The Mandarin r sounds like a cross between the
"American" retroflex r and the ending of the French word "mirage".

I don't agree. There are 2 distinct sounds in Mandarin, both represented by "r". The initial "r"
is what you describe. (热 rè), use [ʐ] or [ɻ] . The final er as in 女儿 nǚ'ér is a
different sound - [ɚ], identical to Ameican rhotic R.

Quote:

Standard Mandarin also uses a rhotic consonant, /ɚ/. This usage is a unique feature of Standard
Mandarin; other dialects lack this sound. In Chinese, this feature is known as Erhua. There are
two cases in which it is used:

1. In a small number of words, such as 二 "two", 耳 "ear", etc. All of these words are
pronounced as [ɑɚ] with no initial consonant.
2. As a noun suffix (Traditional: -兒, Simplified: -儿). The suffix combines with the final, and
regular but complex changes occur as a result.

The "r" final must be distinguished from the retroflex semi-vowel written as "ri" in the pinyin
spelling and represented either by <ʐ> or <ɻ> in IPA. Saying "The star rode a donkey," in
English, or "Wo nü-er ru yiyuan" (My daughter entered the hospital), will make it clear that the
first "r" in either case is said with a relatively lax tongue, whereas the second "r" sounds both
involve a very active curling of the tongue and contact with the top of the mouth.

In other dialects of Mandarin, the rhotic consonant is sometimes replaced by another syllable,
such as "li" in words that indicate locations. For example, "zher" and "nar" become "zhe li" and
"na li", respectively.

Se more on Érhuà (儿化):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erhua

renzhe -

I know, I said that in the same post lol.

atitarev -

Ah Yes, sorry, I missed the last sentence.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Best Chinese Newspaper 最好的中文日报 (Mainland - Simplified) - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

Best Chinese Newspaper 最好的中文日报 (Mainland - Simplified)
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gato -

Quote:

I was surprised to see writing techniques that seemed almost childish, things a proper journalist
in the U.S. would never write, like frequent use of onomatopoeias. I often encounter things like
"The water was plip-plip-plopping" etc. I also often find articles framed in highly emotional,
soap opera-esque language, i.e. "The people cried out their adoration one after another," instead
of something like "All were pleased by the idea." Anyone else find this strange?

That's actually something common to writing in mainland. It's partly tradition, but Communism may
have something to do with it. What was Eastern Bloc writing like?
See this post:
http://www. From Beijing Chinese School/showth...361#post111361
Chinese style vs. English style

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lilongyue -

Thanks for the link, had a good laugh reading that one. I really identify with a lot of what was
said about long sentences, etc. Many times I have marveled at the length of Chinese sentences.

wushijiao -

The editorials of Hong Kong newspapers and magazines tend to be similar to what you would find in
the English language press.

randall_flagg -

I recommended the 南方周末 earlier, but you also might find your local papers interesting. i
don't read the Dalian papers as often as i should, but they do have very INTERESTING articles. i
remember one stating that in 2006, 3 of the "public cleaning employees" were killed while scraping
chewing gum of the streets. (not funny in itself, but the way they wrote it up into a big
headline was so terrible that it was funny!)

this style of writing might be a good contrast to the somewhat more serious 南方周末。

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Learn Chinese - Favorite Chinese Teas - Page 5 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Food

Favorite Chinese Teas
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Jack MacKelly -

Quote:

Taiwan's Ten Ren

love that one

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - dominant language in ShenZhen - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Non-Mandarin Chinese

dominant language in ShenZhen
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wannabeafreak -

Quote:

10 million guest workers make up the dominant population of Shenzhen, the only city in Guangdong,
in which speaking Putonghua is not discriminated. Although the residents more or less speak
Cantonese to a varying degree of fluency. As mentioned above, you more likely get people speak
Mandarin to you in the street scene.

Could you expand on the discrimination part? Is Mandarin looked down upon in Guangdong?

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huisheng -

It's not the language itself, but the users that is discriminated. Rooted in the locals'
mentality, whoever speaks Mandarin got to be a guest worker (外来劳工) coming to the province
for low skilled jobs. Obviously Shenzhen is the only city where Waishengren (外省人) can make
it big in politics and business, hence the respect for the use of the language. That's my
understanding. I could be wrong.

LaVandez -

From my brief time in Shenzhen I woud say that it's Guandonghua - Putonghua - Sichuanhua for
business. Sichuanhua is not so surprising once you realize that many came and are still coming for
the work. At least this is among the business people that I know. Most of the old guard are in
international trade or Hong Kong expats, Putonghua gets you up on the new schoolers, Sichuanhua on
a good portion of the workforce and some midle managers who are originally from places within
Sichuan.

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Chinese Course - Ep4 Plot - Chinese Style Divorce - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Films and Television > Chinese TV Shows - The First Episode

Project
Ep4 Plot - Chinese Style Divorce
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roddy -

爱评不上评不上 - if they want to not promote me, then let them! - 爱verb不verb structure.

这次医院里只有一个名? - 名 here is the measure word for a position (ie job) so she's
saying that there is only one promotion available.

Roddy

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kudra -

Roddy,

肖莉:这次医院里只有一个名?

here ? is a character I couldn't get.
And anyway isn't 个 the measure?

Thanks for everyone's help.

roddy -

Whoops. 名额 - quota (of people)

eddiewouldgo -

肖莉:我太自作多情了。我怎么可能是你的对手呢。论水平论贡献,我都差�
��一大
截呢。全当热身了。这次我没戏。
I presume too much! (I just learned this in David and Helen in China, but it was in a romantic
context) How could I be your competitor? As far as level(of
achievement) and contribution, I'm below you a huge amount. (My whole body
is hot) I am too embarrassed. I'm not kidding.

热身 - means warmup, warmup excercise.

chrisb -

Fourth episode: 33:28

Dong Bei is driving Dr. Song to his "meeting" and says:

想找辆凯迪拉克

Any thoughts on what this means?

yelei_1981 -

凯迪拉克=Cadillac
Does this make sense?

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Chinese School - Interested in tattoos and meanings - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Interested in tattoos and meanings
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123abc -

Hey everyone, I've been lurking for a while now - really interested in symbols and tattoos etc.
I thought I'd come out of hiding and actually post.

What are these symbols and what do they translate to?

Any responses would be appreciated

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JasonTsia -

The character at the top is "气"(qi or ch'i) whose basic meaning is "gas", but in Chinese
culture, this character always used to describe some mysterious or spiritual energy in nature or
in our body, like "气功"(Qigong or Chi Kung).

The middle one, "心", means "heart", and the bottom, "愛", means "love".

rootfool -

the first character is not very clear,but I think it's "氣"which has many meanings,and I think it
means "元气" here.The others is "心" and "爱" which means "heart" and "love"。
hope it helps and it's just a personal opinion.

123abc -

Thank you both

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Chinese language - Criticise my accent - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

Criticise my accent
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ai_ya -

Hello, my name is David, I'm from the UK and I'm 18 years old.
I've been learning Chinese for a few years now, and I am going to attend university in Dalian next
week.
I would like people to criticise my accent - what's good and bad about it, and how I could improve.
I just read a silly story that I found - didn't want to read anything too serious.
Thanks !

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semantic nuance -

Well done!

I notice 2 words that I think you can work more on them:

1. 突然一隻小猴子喊起來:不好了.... You sound to prounce it between the first and the
second tone. It should be the 3rd tone.

2. 月亮掉到井裡了. 大猴子一看也叫了起來:不好了!
月亮真地掉到井裡了...You prounce it as 'yao4', but it should be 'dao4'.

I believe you know their pronunciations but read them off the tone out of nervousness.
Good job! Keep going!!

Hope it helps!

coolnicholas -

very good !! at least i can understand what you tell about.your pronunciation is very good!

Ari 桑 -

Super good. How long have you been studying?

h.way -

hi ,ai_ya ,I have to say ,your accent sounds not bad at all,amazing
well,some tips for you
there some words should be pronunced more mellow and full,like
晚 来 捞上来 小 拉着 接 这
Generally speaking ,no obviosly mistake in the tone of your pronunciation except 接jie1,not jie4
I must admit that your Chinese sounds much better than my English.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Chinese School - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Best of Chinese Study Tools

Thread: Best of Chinese Study Tools
View Single Post

  #1 

Best of Chinese Study Tools

A "short list" of the best Chinese study resources available to help those new to
online/electronic resources to get off the ground.

Contents

* Dictionaries
* Tones
* Grammar
* Listening Material
* Reading Material
* Flashcards/Vocabulary
* Study Tools
* Converters
* Language Partners
* Games
* Other

[top]Dictionaries

Online Reading Assistant (instant pinyin and definition while you browse)
* Adsotrans
* Popup Chinese Translator extension for Firefox
* popjisyo.com
* Rikai.com

Online Dictionaries
*
  o YellowBridge Chinese English Dictionary
  o ChinesePod Dictionary (sentences w/ recordings)
  o Dict.cn Dictionary, English/Chinese searchable dictionary with many examples but no pinyin.
  o Xiaoma Cidian is a dictionary searchable by English, Character and Pinyin, and also has
    links to other helpful word lists. [S]
  o MDBG Dictionary is an all-around dictionary
  o Guoyu Dictionary, commercial-level traditional Chinese-based dictionary maintained by
    Taiwan Department of Education, with large number of word entries and detailed definitions.
  o Classical Chinese Dictionary (A) [T]
  o Specialized Chinese Dictionaries [S]
  o Zhongwen.com, good radical/stem derivation diagrams fro exploring the relationship between
    characters (in traditional character)

  Online Dictionaries that support screen (mouse) character writing
  o nciku.com - a new tool based on UniHan
  o A Java tool from Chinese-Tools.com

  Offline (instant pinyin and definition for offline text reading)
  o Dimsum (provides pop-up definition for both websites and offline texts; uses Java, should
    run on PC/Mac/and more)
  o PlecoDict (Palm/PocketPC; US$99.95 for version with John deFrancis's excellent ABC
    dictionary, allows for a instant definition while reading on your PDA - works the best with
    TealDoc on Palm; excellent full-featured flashcard system). See discussion.
  o Wakan Free mouse-over pop-up dictionary for all windows applications.
  o Wenlin, US$199, with academic discounts possible; PC/Mac; includes the ABC dictionary;
    provides mouse-over pinyin and definitions and unique features such as one-click searches for
    all characters containing a component or all phrases containing a character. (G) [S,T]
  o NJStar (mainly a word processor, but version 5.0 also has a teaching mode which provides
    pop-up definitions and automated vocabulary list generator; demo version is fully functional,
    but need to pay for registration for all features, including the full dictionary)
  o HanConv: converts between Chinese characters to pinyin and romanized Cantonese, and
    convert between Simplified and Traditional Chinese characters
  o Puku: converts between Chinese character to pinyin on Microsoft Pocket PC. Freeware made
    by a non-profit Putonghua advocate group.

  o For more on electronic dictionaries, see this discussion and this.
  o For more on mouse-over/pop-up dictionaries, see this discussion.

  [top]Tones

  o SpeakGoodChinese (program for training tone pronunciation, see discussion)
  o Start from Pinyin: Alphabet of Pinyin (with .wav audio)
  o Mandarin Chinese Pronunciation Guide (no audio)
  o Pinyin Practice (B)
  o Romanization Explained
  o Pinyin Wiki
  o More here...

  [top]Grammar

  o ChinesePod (grammar guide, or podcasts with grammar points).

* Chinese Usage Dictionary.

[top]Listening Material

* Chinese as a Second Language Podcasts.
* Podcast with free transcripts from Nankai University.
* Chinese Voices, collection of short, engaging mini-essays with accompanying audio for
  intermediate students.
* CCTV Travel in Chinese (teaches you Chinese with a travel theme; transcript available on
  website). See this discussion.
* CCTV's &quot;Economics Half Hour&quot; 《经济半小时》: videos (click on the little icon
  after the titles) and transcripts of many shows are available on the site. A little like a more
  commercialized version of "60 Minutes." The show covers many subjects, not just the economy,
  despite its name.
* ChinesePod.com
* China Radio International beginning Chinese listening materials (with pinyin and English
  transcripts). See discussion.
* Chinese subtitles/script for Chinese movies (for movies that you may have downloaded from
  lib.verycd.com). See discussion.
* Online audio lessons (I)
* Chinese Radio Online
* Chinese Television Online
* Radio Free Asia
* ChinesePod (learning community &amp; podcasts)
* More listening resources: see this discussion.

[top]Reading Material

* Chinese Text Sampler (texts graded by difficulty level) (linked through anonymouse.org due to
  site being blocked by the Great Firewall)
* NewsInChinese.com
* Collection of writings by famous modern authors such as Lu Xun, Su Tong, and Wang Xiaobo

[top]Flashcards/Vocabulary

* Software
  o jMemorize, Supermemo-like flashcard system that keeps track of your study history
  o MyChineseFlashCards: nice open-source Chinese flashcard program (Mac, PC, Linux)
  o See PlecoDict above
  o Zhongwen Development Tool, java-based cross platform (Windows, Mac, Linux). Open Source.

* Specific Flashcards
  o Integrated Chinese Level 1, with about 1154 words (simplified characters)
  o David &amp; Helen
  o New Practical Chinese Reader
  o Most frequently used character list
  o Hanyu Shuipin Kaoshi (HSK; Chinese Achievement Test) vocabulary list
    -> Mnemosyne/Anki format, TSV format, Supermemo format, KVoctrain/Parley format
  o Lists of most frequently used words phrases in literature and news
  o 250 Most Common Idioms
  o List of common Chinese names and translation of foreign names
  o FlashcardExchange
  o YellowBridge Flashcards

[top]Study Tools

* Hanyu College: Animated dialogues, karaoke, radio, and advanced readings (B,I,A) [S]
* DimSum: offline reading tool with annotation, dictionary (I,A) [S,T]
* University of Oxford Multi-Media Language Course (B,I)
* Read Mandarin - Learn to Read Chinese : Very useful website created by Daniel for learning
  characters (B, +pronunciation audio files) [S]

[top]Converters

* Simplified to Traditional
* Traditional to Simplified

[top]Language Partners

* Find a Chinese chat partner with QQ (a popular instant message program in China). See
  discussion.
* Meet Language Partners Online
* LangEx

[top]Games

* Chinese Memory Card Game
* Chinese Squabble
* http://pirate.shu.edu/~chendong/chin...uage_games.htm
* http://qi-journal.com/culture.asp?-t...nConcentration
* http://www.flyordie.com/games-cn.html
* http://trc.ucdavis.edu/msjacob/gamelist.htm
* http://www.shareup.com/Linguata_Chin...oad-47158.html (PC only)

[top]Other

* Mandarin Slang (Wikipedia)
* Mandarin-Cantonese Term Converter
* Hanzismatter exposes the misuse of Chinese characters
* Signese exposes characters in action

====================================================================================================

Contributors: renzhe, doumeizhen, gato, flameproof, trevelyan, jbradfor, anthony_barker
Created by doumeizhen, 4th April 2006 at 12:50 AM
Last edited by renzhe, 14th May 2008 at 03:34 AM
81 Comments , 49942 Views

Discussion

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 3rd December 2007, 07:57 PM

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&quot;Multiple posts&quot; by gougou

Views: 1,084

Posted By roddy

Re: &quot;Multiple posts&quot; by gougou

/ gives up

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 3rd December 2007, 07:12 PM

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&quot;Multiple posts&quot; by gougou

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Posted By roddy

Re: &quot;Multiple posts&quot; by gougou

Thought police :clap

Myriam, a number of your posts are hard to understand and seem to bear no relevance to the topics
they are placed in. You also have a habit of deleting posts after you've made...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 30th April 2008, 04:02 AM

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Radiolab - Musical language

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Posted By fredrik_w

Radiolab - Musical language

Interesting radio show:

http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2007/09/25

" What is music? How does it work? Why does it move us? Why are some people better at it than
others? In this hour,...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 17th April 2006, 03:56 AM

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What other languages do we speak

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Posted By cp11141

Native: greek Fairly fluent: english Used to be...

Native: greek
Fairly fluent: english
Used to be fluent: french

Beginner: chinese (studying on and off)
Just started: russian, german
Plans to start: spanish (but quite easy to read already)

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