Bloggen

Never make these mistakes in Chinese 57

         Rúɡuǒ jiē bú dào nǐ de xìn, wǒ jiù bù lái nǐ nà’ér le.
False:  如果接不到你的信,我就不来你那儿了。
        Rúɡuǒ jiē bú dào nǐ de xìn, wǒ jiù bú qù nǐ nà’ér le.
True:  如果接不到你的信,我就不去你那儿了。

Continue Reading →

Lesson 043 I’m Hungry.

 M: Pengyoumen, huanying dao Xianzai Xue Hanyu. Wo shi ML
S: Wo shi Stuart. Repeat everything. Women mashang, immediately, mashang kaishi, start. Women bu yao langfei shijian.
M: 为什么,wei shenme?
S: 因为我饿了, yinwei wo e le.
M: 哦, 你饿了,ni e le!
S: 是的,非常饿, feichang e.
M: 好,我们吃饭去, women chi fan qu.
S: Hao zhuyi.
M: And what did that all mean?
S: Let’s dissect what we said. 我们马上开始。
M: Women mashang kaishi. Women kaishi, we know means ‘we start’. Mashang MA SHANG mashang. Hear the tones? Dui le, mashang, 3rd, 4th. Mashang means ‘immediately’, ‘at once’.
S: It literally means, ‘horse’, ma, the type you ride, and ‘on’, shang. If you jump on a nervous horse, it immediately gallops off, maybe that’s the origin of ma shang. Ok, now try to say, ‘we start immediately’.
M: Dui le, Women mashang kaishi. Women mashang kaishi.
S: Now try, ‘we go at once’.
M: Hen hao. 我们马上去, women mashang qu.
S: Did any of you say, ‘我们马上走, women mashang zou’? Both are ok.
M: But zou and qu, remember, have slightly different meanings. If you say, Wo zou, it means you might or might not have a specific place or purpose in mind. But if you say, wo qu, then you do have a specific place or purpose in mind.
S: For example, if you’re angry, and just want to get away, you might say, Hao ba, wo zou!
M: But if someone asks, ‘who’ll go to rescue Mother from those dangerous criminals?’ you could say,

Continue Reading →

Food names

年糕 Nian-gao; rise cake; New Year 团圆饭 family reunio dinner 年夜饭 the dinner on New Year’s Eve 饺子 Jiao-zi; Chinese meat ravioli 汤圆 Tang-yuan; dumplings

Continue Reading →

Chinese language vocabulary 汉语词汇 OMG! Chinese Buzzwords! (31)

恐归族 (kǒng guī zú)
home-going phobia clan
The term refers to people who plan to return home for the annual family reunio during the Spring Festival but are put off by the high travel costs and crowded transportation. Most of these people are migrant workers, who have to stay in the area wher they work to spend the festival holidays as train tickets are sold out and they can’t afford planes.

Continue Reading →
1 1,349 1,350 1,351 1,352 1,353 1,697