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Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 18101290)
I'm reminded of the "那个" thread.
tb |
Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18101953)
When first arriving here, 那个 really, really got me confused. Especially since it's used as 'um' rather than 'that one', so when I first asked someone what they said, they would say, I didn't say anything!
tb |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 18102093)
Were you around here when that discussion was taking place? It was one of my favorites.
tb |
Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18103177)
No...sounds like the sort of intro in china the guide books omit!
tb |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 18103879)
The thread in question is a "sleeping dog", but I encourage you to seek it out and soak it in.
tb |
Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18107004)
The question is, what term should one search under -- the most obvious would not be allowed by FT!
tb http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/china...e-me-most.html |
Originally Posted by tauphi
(Post 18108935)
tb |
lol, 那个 and 这个!
I can picture how a Beijing person would pronounce both of those words. Not that hard to duplicate too. haha |
When we first arrived in mainland China, we thought we would be able to speak without any difficulty since we studied PuTongHua in Taiwan.
We decided to attend Mandarin class on the mainland. Our school knew our Chinese was already passable so they sent us to classes where the lecturer was from Harbin, Beijing & one other place where their accents are very different from the accents of Taiwan and the south. First month, we couldn't understand 90% of what the teachers were saying. We were so frustrated. We are now very grateful that we were exposed to different types of accents because we can understand despite the accents. Interestingly, many at the university where we studied Chinese say that they wished there accent was more "Beijing". It sounds more educated. |
Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18093901)
Are we talking about the same accent that sounds like a boat-load of pirates just landed? Does that sound posh to chinese ears???!!
tb
Originally Posted by tycosiao
(Post 18100541)
I thought Shanghai's mandarin was good without accent, just that they speak that damn fast.
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I have to say, I spoke about this with some of my students today (none of whom are beijingers) and they were incredulous that the beijinger accent is sophisticated. They were just of the opinion that beijingers sound full of themselves!
Of course, I don't swim in the same rarified circles as moondog, so maybe it depends on whom one is talking with. tb |
Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18124249)
I have to say, I spoke about this with some of my students today (none of whom are beijingers) and they were incredulous that the beijinger accent is sophisticated. They were just of the opinion that beijingers sound full of themselves!
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Originally Posted by trueblu
(Post 18124249)
I have to say, I spoke about this with some of my students today (none of whom are beijingers) and they were incredulous that the beijinger accent is sophisticated. They were just of the opinion that beijingers sound full of themselves!
Of course, I don't swim in the same rarified circles as moondog, so maybe it depends on whom one is talking with. tb |
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