Category: Spoken Chinese

Chinese Lesson 3: Where do you live?

Sentence Pattern
你住在哪儿?(Nǐ zhù zài năr?):Where do you live? Words
1.早上(zăoshàng):[n]morning
2.住(zhù):[v]to live
3.在(zài):[prep]at
4.哪儿(năr):[pron]where
5.一(yī):[num]one
6.号(hào):[n]number
7.宿舍楼(sùshèlóu):[n]dormitory building
8.这些(zhè xiē):[pron]these
9.花儿(huār):[n]flower
10.是(shì):[v]be, is ,are ,am
11.我们(wǒmen):[pron]us, we
12.送给(sònggěi):[v]to give
13.的(de):[part]used after an attribute
14.六(liù):[num]six
15.七(qī):[num]seven
16.得(de):[num]used after certain verbs
17.近(jìn):[adj]near, close
18.再见(zàijiàn):[v]goodbye

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Classification of Chinese Dialects

Chinese consists of a number of dialect continuums. Variations in speech usually become far more pronounced as distances boost, with handful of radical breaks. Nonetheless, the degree of change in intelligibility varies immensely based on region. For instance, the varieties of Mandarin spoken in all three northeastern Chinese provinces are mutually intelligible, but in the province of Fujian, where the use of the Min range is dominant, the same selection has to become divided into no less than five distinct subdivisions because the subdivisions are all mutually unintelligible to one anther.
In the book, "The Middle kingdom: a survey of the … Chinese empire and its inhabitants …", published in 1848, the different varieties of Chinese had been described as "dialects", the book acknowledged that they were mutually unintelligible as well as the term "dialect" was utilized in a distinct sense than the western term, in which a dialect was merely indicative of a little distinction in pronunciation, while in China, the entire grammar and idiom had been distinct, the written language was what united the different Chinese dialects. The distinction between Mandarin and other Chinese "dialects" is simply comparable to that between English and its Germanic cousin languages (German, Norwegian, Dutch, Swedish, and so on.)
Mandarin (Common Chinese) is the dominant selection, far more widely studied than the rest. Outdoors of China, the only two varieties generally presented in formal courses are Mandarin and Cantonese. In China, second-language acquisition is normally achieved by means of immersion in the neighborhood language.

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Wu dialeat

Someone said that Wu dialect (吴语 Wúyǔ) is as soft as stream. That's why Wu dialect is also called "wu nong ruan yu (吴侬软语 wúnóng ruǎnyǔ)" in China. Whether it's right or wrong, come and find the answer by yourself.

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Dialect of Min

Dialect of Min (闽语 mǐnyǔ) is an important part of Chinese. Min varieties of Chinese are spoken by some 75 million individuals primarily in Fujian (福建 Fújiàn) province in China, and also in some parts of Jiangsu (江苏 Jiāngsū), Zhejiang (浙江 Zhèjiāng), Jiangxi (江西 Jiāngxī), Guangdong (广东 Guǎngdōng), Hainan (海南 Hǎinán) and Guangxi (广西 Guǎngxī), at the same time as in Taiwan (台湾 Táiwān) and Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Burma as well as other cities in Southeast Asia, and inside the USA, especially in New York City.

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