{"id":16235,"date":"2019-11-07T04:17:02","date_gmt":"2019-11-07T04:17:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/teaching-examination\/lesson-016-revision-of-the-usages-of-numbers-2\/"},"modified":"2019-11-07T04:17:02","modified_gmt":"2019-11-07T04:17:02","slug":"lesson-016-revision-of-the-usages-of-numbers-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/lesson-016-revision-of-the-usages-of-numbers-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Lesson 016 Revision of the Usages of Numbers"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>  \t<script type='text\/javascript' src='https:\/\/res.hjfile.cn\/pt\/vendor\/hjplayer.js'><\/script><script type='text\/javascript'>HJPlayer.init(\"hjptype=song&player=1&son=https:\/\/f1.w.hjfile.cn\/file\/201107\/lesson016.MP3&autoplay=no&caption=false&lrc=&autoreplay=1&bgcolor=FFFFFF&width=200&height=20\");<\/script><\/p>\n<p>  \tYajie: Perfect Chinese your way, in only five minutes a day. Welcome to Chinese Studio. I&rsquo;m Yajie.<br \/>  \tCam: It&rsquo;s good to be back.&nbsp; Zao shang hao Yajie.&nbsp; Time sure flies. We are already at the end of the week. That means it&rsquo;s time for us to go over what we&rsquo;ve learned.<br \/>  \tYajie: This week we mainly focused on how to use numbers. Let&rsquo;s go over Sentences In The week.<\/p>\n<p>  \t<strong>***************Sentences in the Week<\/strong><br \/>  \tDuring the week we focused on how to use numbers. For example, 2003\u5e74, the year 2003; \u4e00\u6708, January; \u4e09\u6708\uff0cMarch. \u56db\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u53f7 April the 25. All in today&rsquo;s Chinese Studio.&nbsp;<br \/>  \t****************<\/p>\n<p>  \tYajie: In Chinese, the four figures making up the name of a year are read out as four separate numbers and &ldquo;\u5e74&rdquo; is put at the end. For example, this year, 2003\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n), the year 2003.<br \/>  \tCam: 2003\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>  \tYajie:Sometime people also say \u4e24\u5343\u96f6\u4e09\u5e74.<br \/>  \tCam: \u4e24\u5343\u96f6\u4e09\u5e74 (li\u01ceng qi\u0101n l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>  \tYajie: In Chinese the year 2000 is 2000\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng ni&aacute;n).<br \/>  \tCam: 2000\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng ling ni&aacute;n).<br \/>  \tYajie: Or you can say\u4e24\u5343\u5e74 (li\u01ceng qi\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>  \tYajie: Month in Chinese is \u6708(yu&egrave;). The name of the months are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 12 with &ldquo;\u6708&rdquo;.<br \/>  \tCam: January is\u4e00\u6708 (y\u012b yu&egrave;)\uff0cFebruary is\u4e8c\u6708 (&egrave;r yu&egrave;), right?<br \/>  \tYajie: Exactly! And how to say March?<br \/>  \tCam: Is it \u56db\u6708(Si yue)?<br \/>  \tYajie: Nope, March in Chinese is \u4e09\u6708 (s\u0101n yu&egrave;). Remember we said, the name of the months are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 12 with &ldquo;\u6708&rdquo;.<br \/>  \tCam: OK. I see. March is \u4e09\u6708 (s\u0101n yu&egrave;).<br \/>  \tYajie: In Chinese, the names of the dates are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 31 with \u53f7, which is the spoken form for date, or \u65e5, the written form. For example, December 25th, Christmas\u5341\u4e8c\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u53f7 (sh&iacute; &egrave;r yu&egrave; &egrave;rsh&iacute; w\u01d4 h&agrave;o).<br \/>  \tCam: \u5341\u4e8c\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u65e5 (sh&iacute; &egrave;r yu&egrave; &egrave;rsh&iacute; w\u01d4 h&agrave;o). And the New Year is on the \u4e00\u6708\u4e00\u53f7(y\u012b yu&egrave; y\u012b h&agrave;o), right?<br \/>  \tYajie: Right, it&rsquo;s\u4e00\u6708\u4e00\u53f7(y\u012b yu&egrave; y\u012b h&agrave;o).<br \/>  \tYajie:&nbsp; If you want to ask a child&rsquo;s age, you could say &ldquo;\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f&rdquo; (n\u01d0 j\u01d0 su&igrave; le?) \u51e0 means how many. And \u5c81 means age.<br \/>  \tCam: &ldquo;\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f&rdquo; (n\u01d0 j\u01d0 su&igrave; le?)<br \/>  \tYajie: For an adult or people of the same general age as yourself, you can say: \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>  \tCam: \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute; du\u014d d&agrave; le?)<br \/>  \tYajie: Yes. As I said before\u591a, is an adverb, meaning how many? \u591a\u5927together means how old. \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute; du\u014d d&agrave; le?)<br \/>  \t***************Sentences in the Week<br \/>  \tThis week we learned how to say the days during a week in Chinese. The numbers from 1 to 6 follow&ldquo;\u661f\u671f&rdquo; and are employed to express Monday to Saturday. Monday, \u661f\u671f\u4e00(x\u012bngq\u012b y\u012b). Sunday, \u661f\u671f\u65e5or\u661f\u671f\u5929.&nbsp; Also we learned how to ask one&rsquo;s age in Chinese\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>  \t***************<br \/>  \tYajie:&nbsp; One more thing there is another courteous way of asking a senior person&rsquo;s age.&nbsp; You can say: \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>  \tCam: \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute;n du\u014d d&agrave; le?) We&rsquo;ve learned \u60a8. It&rsquo;s the polite form of \u4f60, right?<br \/>  \tYajie:&nbsp; Right!<br \/>  \tCam: Send us your answer to chinese@crifm.com. That&rsquo;s chinese@crifm.com. If you answer the question correctly, you&rsquo;ll be able to win CRI prizes! Also you are welcome to log on to the website, that&rsquo;s en.chinabroadcast.cn.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s available 24 hours a day.<br \/>  \tYajie: Well, every one, you can win a CRI gift by answering the question of the day. This time please make a sentence with \u661f\u671f\u5929. You might even win CRI prizes! Hope you will join us tomorrow on China Radio International. \u518d\u89c1\uff01<br \/>  \tCam: \u518d\u89c1\uff01<\/p>\n<p>  \t(Written by Zhao Pingping)<\/p>\n<div class=\"chine-tie-zi-nei-rong-zhi-hou\" id=\"chine-1434003145\"><script async src=\"\/\/pagead2.googlesyndication.com\/pagead\/js\/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-1889418300638825\" crossorigin=\"anonymous\"><\/script><ins class=\"adsbygoogle\" style=\"display:block;\" data-ad-client=\"ca-pub-1889418300638825\" \ndata-ad-slot=\"7273022922\" \ndata-ad-layout-key=\"-gw-3+1f-3d+2z\"\ndata-ad-format=\"fluid\"><\/ins>\n<script> \n(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); \n<\/script>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Yajie: Perfect Chinese your way, in only five minutes a day. Welcome to Chinese Studio. I&rsquo;m Yajie.<br \/>\n  \tCam: It&rsquo;s good to be back.&nbsp; Zao shang hao Yajie.&nbsp; Time sure flies. We are already at the end of the week. That means it&rsquo;s time for us to go over what we&rsquo;ve learned.<br \/>\n  \tYajie: This week we mainly focused on how to use numbers. Let&rsquo;s go over Sentences In The week.<\/p>\n<p>  \t***************Sentences in the Week<br \/>\n  \tDuring the week we focused on how to use numbers. For example, 2003\u5e74, the year 2003; \u4e00\u6708, January; \u4e09\u6708\uff0cMarch. \u56db\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u53f7 April the 25. All in today&rsquo;s Chinese Studio.&nbsp;<br \/>\n  \t****************<\/p>\n<p>  \tYajie: In Chinese, the four figures making up the name of a year are read out as four separate numbers and &ldquo;\u5e74&rdquo; is put at the end. For example, this year, 2003\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n), the year 2003.<br \/>\n  \tCam: 2003\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>\n  \tYajie:Sometime people also say \u4e24\u5343\u96f6\u4e09\u5e74.<br \/>\n  \tCam: \u4e24\u5343\u96f6\u4e09\u5e74 (li\u01ceng qi\u0101n l&iacute;ng s\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>\n  \tYajie: In Chinese the year 2000 is 2000\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng ni&aacute;n).<br \/>\n  \tCam: 2000\u5e74 (&egrave;r l&iacute;ng l&iacute;ng ling ni&aacute;n).<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Or you can say\u4e24\u5343\u5e74 (li\u01ceng qi\u0101n ni&aacute;n).<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Month in Chinese is \u6708(yu&egrave;). The name of the months are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 12 with &ldquo;\u6708&rdquo;.<br \/>\n  \tCam: January is\u4e00\u6708 (y\u012b yu&egrave;)\uff0cFebruary is\u4e8c\u6708 (&egrave;r yu&egrave;), right?<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Exactly! And how to say March?<br \/>\n  \tCam: Is it \u56db\u6708(Si yue)?<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Nope, March in Chinese is \u4e09\u6708 (s\u0101n yu&egrave;). Remember we said, the name of the months are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 12 with &ldquo;\u6708&rdquo;.<br \/>\n  \tCam: OK. I see. March is \u4e09\u6708 (s\u0101n yu&egrave;).<br \/>\n  \tYajie: In Chinese, the names of the dates are produced by combining the numbers 1 to 31 with \u53f7, which is the spoken form for date, or \u65e5, the written form. For example, December 25th, Christmas\u5341\u4e8c\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u53f7 (sh&iacute; &egrave;r yu&egrave; &egrave;rsh&iacute; w\u01d4 h&agrave;o).<br \/>\n  \tCam: \u5341\u4e8c\u6708\u4e8c\u5341\u4e94\u65e5 (sh&iacute; &egrave;r yu&egrave; &egrave;rsh&iacute; w\u01d4 h&agrave;o). And the New Year is on the \u4e00\u6708\u4e00\u53f7(y\u012b yu&egrave; y\u012b h&agrave;o), right?<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Right, it&rsquo;s\u4e00\u6708\u4e00\u53f7(y\u012b yu&egrave; y\u012b h&agrave;o).<br \/>\n  \tYajie:&nbsp; If you want to ask a child&rsquo;s age, you could say &ldquo;\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f&rdquo; (n\u01d0 j\u01d0 su&igrave; le?) \u51e0 means how many. And \u5c81 means age.<br \/>\n  \tCam: &ldquo;\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f&rdquo; (n\u01d0 j\u01d0 su&igrave; le?)<br \/>\n  \tYajie: For an adult or people of the same general age as yourself, you can say: \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>\n  \tCam: \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute; du\u014d d&agrave; le?)<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Yes. As I said before\u591a, is an adverb, meaning how many? \u591a\u5927together means how old. \u4f60\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute; du\u014d d&agrave; le?)<br \/>\n  \t***************Sentences in the Week<br \/>\n  \tThis week we learned how to say the days during a week in Chinese. The numbers from 1 to 6 follow&ldquo;\u661f\u671f&rdquo; and are employed to express Monday to Saturday. Monday, \u661f\u671f\u4e00(x\u012bngq\u012b y\u012b). Sunday, \u661f\u671f\u65e5or\u661f\u671f\u5929.&nbsp; Also we learned how to ask one&rsquo;s age in Chinese\u4f60\u51e0\u5c81\u4e86\uff1f \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>\n  \t***************<br \/>\n  \tYajie:&nbsp; One more thing there is another courteous way of asking a senior person&rsquo;s age.&nbsp; You can say: \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f<br \/>\n  \tCam: \u60a8\u591a\u5927\u4e86\uff1f(n&iacute;n du\u014d d&agrave; le?) We&rsquo;ve learned \u60a8. It&rsquo;s the polite form of \u4f60, right?<br \/>\n  \tYajie:&nbsp; Right!<br \/>\n  \tCam: Send us your answer to chinese@crifm.com. That&rsquo;s chinese@crifm.com. If you answer the question correctly, you&rsquo;ll be able to win CRI prizes! Also you are welcome to log on to the website, that&rsquo;s en.chinabroadcast.cn.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s available 24 hours a day.<br \/>\n  \tYajie: Well, every one, you can win a CRI gift by answering the question of the day. This time please make a sentence with \u661f\u671f\u5929. You might even win CRI prizes! Hope you will join us tomorrow on China Radio International. \u518d\u89c1\uff01<br \/>\n  \tCam: \u518d\u89c1\uff01<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[28],"tags":[98],"class_list":["post-16235","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-teaching-examination","tag-chinese-studio"],"views":161,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16235","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=16235"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16235\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=16235"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=16235"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/mm\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=16235"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}