Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Luobot

Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 15th February 2008, 04:45 AM

Replies: 15

New Javascript

Views: 725

Posted By Luobot


Re: New Javascript

酷!



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 14th February 2008, 11:43 AM

Replies: 15

New Javascript

Views: 725

Posted By Luobot


Re: New Javascript

2nd try ...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 14th February 2008, 03:37 AM

Replies: 15

New Javascript

Views: 725

Posted By Luobot


Re: New Javascript

...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 11th February 2008, 02:54 AM

Replies: 15

New Javascript

Views: 725

Posted By Luobot


Re: New Javascript

Very nice. Would make a great Firefox add-on tool :)

Also worth considering:
A favicon for http://adsotrans.com/
so that it fits on one's Firefox bookmarks toolbar and is recognizable without...



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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.50 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Jo-Ann

Forum: Speaking and Listening 24th February 2005, 02:55 AM

Replies: 43

Why Do You Learn Chinese?(ple help me with the survey)

Views: 6,910

Posted By Jo-Ann


I had been teaching Chinese cooking (since the...

I had been teaching Chinese cooking (since the mid-70s) and wanted to be able to read a Chinese
menu. First classes were just pin yin, in NYC, but then I started classes, for credit, at a...



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Monday, December 22, 2008

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Lu

Forum: Speaking and Listening 18th August 2006, 09:51 PM

Replies: 44

Poll: Why learning spoken Chinese as a foreigner is easy and hard

Views: 7,920

Posted By Lu


Qcash: does it really get better, or just more...

Qcash: does it really get better, or just more fluent? With me, it's the latter, but the grammar
etc tends to get a bit worse.



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Sunday, December 21, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: opper567

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th August 2006, 11:49 PM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By opper567


Isn't a New Jersey accent very similar to a...

Isn't a New Jersey accent very similar to a Brooklyn accent? Were the people who looked down on
you people with Jersey accents or more standard accents?

Yes and No. The Northern Jersey and Brooklyn...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 14th August 2006, 11:41 PM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By opper567


I disagree. I think that pronouncing words...

I disagree. I think that pronouncing words correctly and not using slang is more correct over the
colloquial variants. Colloquialisms can lead to confusion in communication on one end of a...



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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Chinese Character - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.03 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Smoothie

Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th March 2004, 07:02 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By Smoothie


huh? ok for example like wu as in the number 5. ...

huh?

ok for example like wu as in the number 5. like some said, i hear more "oo" than the "w" sound.



Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th March 2004, 02:24 PM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By Smoothie


how is wu pronounced?

is it "woo" or "ooo"?



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Friday, December 19, 2008

Learning Mandarin - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: elina

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd February 2006, 04:22 PM

Replies: 53

为什么很多的汉语学习者在这里不用汉语?

Views: 6,947

Posted By elina


HashiriKata...

HashiriKata 说得好。


也许用不着向他们解释中文语法,只需告诉他们:
如果我是你,我会这样说:……



Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd February 2006, 12:39 PM

Replies: 53

为什么很多的汉语学习者在这里不用汉语?

Views: 6,947

Posted By elina


我推荐skylee,因为她:
1.中文很好,英文也很好,同时又会不只一种外语,尽管Roddy说过:I...

我推荐skylee,因为她:
1.中文很好,英文也很好,同时又会不只一种外语,尽管Roddy说过:I'm not
looking for a native speaker of Chinese (sorry, but it needs to be designed for Chinese...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th February 2006, 09:35 AM

Replies: 53

为什么很多的汉语学习者在这里不用汉语?

Views: 6,947

Posted By elina


Roddy, I think what other people’s saying is...

Roddy, I think what other people’s saying is reasonable, because:

1. Please remember guests on this forum cannot access the part of “Chat and Language
Exchange”, if you specially set up a section of...



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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.09 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: beijingbooty

Forum: Speaking and Listening 9th June 2003, 03:54 AM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By beijingbooty


funny moment

A chinese friend of my wifes rang up on the phone. At that time I was lying on the bed reading a
book, my wife was lying beside me doing the same. I answered the phone and said. Yes she is here,
you...



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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Chinese Tutor - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: cdn_in_bj

Forum: Speaking and Listening 5th July 2007, 10:18 PM

Replies: 62

Why do caucasians love English?

Views: 4,214

Posted By cdn_in_bj


Re: Why do caucasians love English?

I remember one time I was out having dinner and at the table next to ours there was a group of
Chinese fitting the description of "young professionals". You know, well-dressed, looking like
they just...



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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.07 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: handbus

Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th May 2004, 11:02 PM

Replies: 63

Practicing Chinese with Chinese is impossible!!!

Views: 9,598

Posted By handbus


I am a Chinese guy who have learnt English for 14...

I am a Chinese guy who have learnt English for 14 years. I began my english course when I was 9 in
the primary school.

Many Chinese people think that with a good grasp of English will help them to...



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Monday, December 15, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson




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Showing results 1 to 6 of 6
Search took 0.10 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Luobot

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd June 2007, 09:34 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

@furyou_gaijin -

Yes, some people just like to take photos – as many as possible – while others gain a fuller
sense of satisfaction from the social aspect of communicating about it (more so with...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd June 2007, 07:05 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

@ furyou_gaijin -



Why so? In my original post in this thread (#16), I started out by saying:



You are more than welcome to disagree so that we can consider all different perspectives, but
you...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 20th June 2007, 04:41 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

@ furyou_gaijin



Actually, if you read my earlier post in this thread, you’ll see that I’ve suggested using a
structured, progressive resource (such as CLO or some of the other resources mentioned...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th June 2007, 02:11 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Dear Simon 老师,

On the question of pronunciation, I realized that I was spinning off on another topic, so I
started another thread to discuss what I was getting at here, but didn’t adequately...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th June 2007, 12:37 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

I agree with most of what Mirgcire (in post #52) said, except for these two points:

1 – If Jenny’s Mandarin is clearer than 99.99% of what’s out there (I would lower that to
just 99%), then...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 6th January 2007, 12:10 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By Luobot


Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Chinesepod.com - Does it really work?

There isn’t a clear “yes” or “no” answer to your question. It depends on your personal
learning style and the other resources that you have available to you. ...



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Sunday, December 14, 2008

Speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Showing results 1 to 7 of 7
Search took 0.09 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: SteveK

Forum: Speaking and Listening 5th May 2007, 05:30 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

The launching of the new LingQ system has been delayed for one major reason. We tried to produce
an off line "client" version and we gave up after one year spent on the project. We just could
not...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 10th February 2007, 01:20 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

We are very close to having a multilanguage version. I am Beta testing for Russian, and others for
German right now. Asian languages are a few weeks away. I will certainly let you know when we
are...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th February 2007, 06:24 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

We learn by relating new things to things we already know. That is why in the first stages of
learning a new language it is useful to have the text in a language you already know, usually
your...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th February 2007, 01:03 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I speak 10 languages and have attacked Korean and Russian these last two years. I am 61.
When you begin you do not need a teacher, in fact you cannot use a teacher. You just need to
listen and read...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 6th February 2007, 12:36 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I have been away for a few days without Internet contact. I am going into a 90km cross county ski
race in Sweden (the Vasaloppet) in March and since I am not a big cross country skier (and 61) I...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st February 2007, 01:40 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

For a bilingual discussion of language learning (Chinese and English) please go to

http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheLinguistOnLanguage-Chinese

and scroll down to the video podcast of the discussion...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st February 2007, 01:20 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK


Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I noticed this thread as a referrer to my blog so I thought I would comment here.
In my view a useful and realistic goal of language learning is fluency, not perfection. One of the
most important...



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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.04 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: zhenhui

Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th February 2006, 03:54 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By zhenhui


LOL, will get kick out of this forum! :mrgreen:

LOL, will get kick out of this forum! :mrgreen:



Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th February 2006, 03:43 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By zhenhui


I'm half Hakka/Hokkien but I can speak...

I'm half Hakka/Hokkien but I can speak
neither. Wish I can though. Does vulgarities in Hokkien
count?:mrgreen:

Diana/贞慧



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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Chinese Character - 一日万命 - Page 2 -








> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
一日万命
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Page 2 of 3 < 1 2 3 >






Myriam -

fireball9261, 一日 means one day and 万 just means an infinite number.



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wannaknowitall -

One day, ten thousands of destinies.
Is this a chinese phrase? if you google "一日万命" this site is the only site that's got it!!
It's gotta mean something like that in one day there are 'myriads' of different destinies (things
happening in peoples' lives)... Like that people experience so much different things.. ?










Myriam -

yeah that's what it's supposed to mean.
--
no, wait, I'm not sure I understand "Like that people experience so much different things.. ?"










wannaknowitall -

by 万命 you mean 'myriads of destinies'?
- so i suppose you don't talk about one person, i mean, what happen to one person in one day
(because it doesn't happen that much to one person), but rather that every day 'consists of'
myriads of destinies (that people all around experience so much different things/destinies...) ??










heifeng -

一日 you say....hmmmm

I won't write the first thing that came to my mind.










Quest -

Myriam, you probably wouldn't want to hear and you wouldn't accept this, but 一日万命 is
gibberish, and if forced to be interpreted literally, it would mean that ten thousand lives are
lost in one day. The "ten thousand destinies" interpretation never crossed my mind.










fireball9261 -

heifeng,

You have a dirty mind! I thought you are a gentleman!










fireball9261 -

Sorry, I am a native Chinese speaker, and I have never heard of this term. Is it a new phrase? I
don't get some of the newer phrases and some of the ones from regional dialects. It does have a
Buddhist feel to it, too. It feels like "multiple destinaties existed in one (short) day."










imron -



Quote:

I thought you are a gentleman!

I guess there's still another surprise coming then










fireball9261 -



Quote:

I guess there's still another surprise coming then

OK. I got it -- I thought heifeng is a gentle woman (or a lady)!












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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Pnyin - Those crazy measure words! -








> Extras > Other cultures and language
Those crazy measure words!
Home New Posts

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thph2006 -

Well, when I first started learning Mandarin I just couldn't comprehend why they invented so many
of those crazy measure words. Now I'm beginning to realize English is just as crazy! Check this
out:

From: http://science.howstuffworks.com/22-...of-animals.htm
Have you ever heard the expression, "a gaggle of geese?" These names for groups of animals are
pretty peculiar, too.
1. A shrewdness of apes
2. A battery of barracudas
3. A kaleidoscope of butterflies
4. A quiver of cobras
5. A murder of crows
6. A convocation of eagles
7. A charm of finches
8. A skulk of foxes
9. A troubling of goldfish
10. A smack of jellyfish
11. A mob of kangaroos
12. An exaltation of larks
13. A troop of monkeys
14. A parliament of owls
15. An ostentation of peacocks
16. A rookery of penguins
17. A prickle of porcupines
18. An unkindness of ravens
19. A shiver of sharks
20. A pod of whales
21. A descent of woodpeckers
22. A zeal of zebras

P.S. As a native English speaker I'm embarrassed to say I only knew 4 of the 22. Measure words, ya
just gotta love em!



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muyongshi -

4! Wow I'm impressed...I only got a pod of whales....










LiYuanXi -

A murder of crows. That's funny~ One might think that the crows got murdered instead.

I have only got 1 too, a kaleidoscope of butterflies.










roddy -

Moved to 'other cultures and languages', as it's not really about Chinese.

Anyway, there's no reason to know these - plenty of them are made up.










BrandeX -

yea, besides being made up for most of them, these are names given to groups of animals, an as
such are not english "measure words". That would be words like " x sheets of paper" or "x bottles
of beer", but even then they do not really fit the same idea presented linguistically of "measure
words" in Chinese or other languages.










johnmck -

I never realised there were so many group nouns for animals, so I had a quick check on the
internet and found this list just for birds:

A dissimulation of birds
A dole of doves
An exaltation of larks
A fall of woodcocks
A flight of swallows [or doves, goshawks, or cormorants]
A gaggle of geese [wild or domesticated]
A host of sparrows
A kettle of hawks [riding a thermal]
A murmuration of starlings
A murder of crows
A muster of storks
A nye of pheasants [on the ground]
An ostentation of peacocks
A paddling of ducks [on the water]
A parliament of owls
A party of jays
A peep of chickens
A pitying of turtledoves
A raft of ducks
A rafter of turkeys
A siege of herons
A skein of geese [in flight]
A sord of mallards
A spring of teal
A tidings of magpies
A trip of dotterel
An unkindness of ravens
A watch of nightingales
A wedge of swans [or geese, flying in a "V"]
A wisp of snipe


For birds, I knew a flock of birds and a gaggle of geese, I had no idea of the others. Clearly one
can get by in English by using the generic "flock" for birds. Does this mean I can get by in
Chinese with just "ge"?










mr.stinky -

we've had this discussion amongst fellow students many times. we usually get these
examples of english measure words: deck of cards and suit of clothes. thing is, they're
not really measure words in the chinese sense, but rather in the english sense of taking
a measure of something.

the english measure words are all nouns themselves, standing for a measure or collection
of something else. and in the case of suit of clothes or deck of cards, the measure is
not just a collection of random items that happen to be the same or similar, they go
together for a purpose. a suit, a deck, a flight (of stairs), is more than just a bunch of
the other thing. and the collected noun thingies all follow "of," so i guess that makes them
prepositional modifiers...(or something, grammar wizards please advise.)

the chinese measure words mostly don't serve that function. i like to think of them as
classifiers or categorizers (trying to think of a better word here). the only real function
they serve, as i sees it, is to clarify (hey, how about clarifiers?) which freakin' noun you're
actually talking about, since so many of the words are the same/similar.

but then, i could be wrong.










muyongshi -



Quote:

not really measure words in the chinese sense, but rather in the english sense of taking a measure
of something.

But this is not always the case such as in a pair of pants or a pair of sock.

Also they may not be the same thing but they still present the same problem in terms of
learning...you have to know what goes with what otherwise in daily life you sound weird and there
is many times less logic than in the english whereas there is some good consistency in the Chinese
allowing you to guess many times.










flameproof -

A fuselage of stewardesses










Josh2007 -

A lot more can be found at http://www.askoxford.com/asktheexper...ctive/?view=uk, which uses the
whole 20 volume Oxford English Dictionary to find them. But note: it also says "Many will be
familiar but others will be unheard of, deriving from 15th century witticisms or literary
imagination, and some are simply archaic or erroneous. " Some of them have never really been used.
What collective term could there be for Chinese language learners? A frustration?












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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Learning Mandarin - New here, Made up a Chinese name! - Page 3 -








> Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations
New here, Made up a Chinese name!
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gougou -



Quote:

And because you are not a real Chinese, too Chinese name is not fit for you.

So how come you use the name Gary, and not yraG or something?

Or are you not Gary? (Forgive my asking, but he loves me, so I'm very curious to know who he is!)



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garyloveyou7 -

And I'm an English major, and it's convenient for me to have an english name in colleague
time.Moreover, I love number 7, so I chose G as the start letter. If you love Manchester United,
you know there is a backfield ,gary nev. We have the same position, right in the match. And i also
like the Chinese meaning for gary. Ok, so clear now??










yonglin -



Quote:

And because you are not a real Chinese, too Chinese name is not fit for you.

Actually, I find this statement quite mean. I always feel sorry for foreigners who for some reason
have acquired awkward and foreign-sounding Chinese names. (Just like I can feel sorry for some
Chinese with ludicruous English names.)

As long as you guys can pick a random English name for interacting with foreigners, I believe that
anyone who's putting the effort into learning Chinese has the right to pick a decent-sounding
Chinese name which he or she can use when interacting with Chinese people.










Lu -

I can understand "Gary"'s logic, but I don't think he's right. By all means, call yourself 王,
you're right that it makes sense with Roy as a first name. Oh and "Gary", by the same logic you
are not a real Englishman, so you shouldn't have a name as English as Gary.

(I wouldn't go with 紅星 though, it's very communist ('red star'), you'll sound like a Chinese
born in the CR. Nothing inherently wrong with that, but it's a bit strange I think. Better pick
something more neutral [and modern].)










muyongshi -

I still think the 丰熠 is your best bet.










heifeng -



Quote:

And because you are not a real Chinese, too Chinese name is not fit for you.

Hmm, I wonder what the 'real' Chinese standard is by the way....maybe our consulting English major
can englighten us on that too.

Anyhoo, down the line, you can change your name as often as you like....I personally have always
been tempted to convert my entire name into 15+ characters just for fun....or maybe just to 4
characters, i.e. even give yourself a 'minority' sounding name that could be fun..make people
think twice, like maybe you are actually a Chinese minority from the west....yes indeed....faar
faaaar west

Yeah, and I wouldn't use the red star name either... I was just throwing it out there for fun
(sorry it was a Friday...must have had a bit too much caffeine, I usually try to limit my not so
helpful responses..that one must have sneaked through)

However, in the long run people will probably just end up calling you 小 something or rather
anyway, so whatever name you pick isn't going to be as big of a deal as you think










cdn_in_bj -

I've heard of a trend lately for Chinese parents to give their kids "non-traditional" Chinese
names. Maybe you should pick your favourite 4 or 5 character chengyu and use that as your Chinese
name. That would be so 牛!












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Monday, December 8, 2008

Chinese Tutor - 拉面 (la mian hand-pulled noodles) dough recipe -








> Chinese Culture > Food
拉面 (la mian hand-pulled noodles) dough recipe
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thph2006 -

Does anyone have a reliable recipe for the dough used to make hand-pulled noodles (拉面)? I've
been searching the web and have mainly just found posts and blogs talking about how no one can
find a real recipe.

The closest thing I found was this:
"A published commercial recipe for Chinese noodles describes dough made from hard wheat flour with
45% added water and 1% kansui powder consisting of 55% sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), 35% potassium
carbonate (K2CO3), and 10% sodium biphosphate dodecahydrate (NaHPO3.12H2O)."

Unfortunately "hard wheat flour" doesn't quite translate into the names printed on bags of flour
found in the grocery store. I'm also having trouble finding kansui powder. I have found what seems
to be the equivalent ingredients already dissolved in water (on the label it's called "雪鹼水")
, but I have no idea how to translate between "1% kansui" and some amount of this liquid. Here's a
picture of the bottle: http://lilyng2000.blogspot.com/2007/...jian-kuih.html

It also seems that some people who've tried using flour + water without kansui report that the
dough breaks before it can stretch fully. At the same time some people who've used kansui claim it
actually stiffens the dough rather than softening it, making it impossible to pull. No one I've
found reports success.

Can anyone help with an authentic (and hopefully detailed) 拉面 dough recipe?

Here are some noodle pulling videos for your pleasure while you think about it!
http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...arch&plindex=6
http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...arch&plindex=1
http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...arch&plindex=1

Thanks!



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yonglin -

Don't know helpful this is and I've never made 拉面 myself, but for your information, hard wheat
flour is high in gluten. Gluten is the protein which makes dough "stretchy", so I would think that
this is quite necessary to make good 拉面.

High-gluten flour is used extensively by bakeries and in the restaurant business, but rarely sold
in grocery stores (ever wondered why the bread you bought from the bakery tasted better than the
one you made yourself?). It usually comes in LARGE packs (say, 10-20 kg) and you would probably be
able to find it from some bakery/restaurant wholesaler. Some kinds of wheat flour sold in normal
grocery stores are fairly high in gluten too, such as durum wheat (this has become more popular
recently, at least in Europe... for GI reasons I think?!)

Probably, finding some hard wheat flour is necessary but not sufficient to make good 拉面.

Best of luck. Upload a video on youtube when you manage!!










imron -

Yep, I had a local 拉面 restaurant teach me how to make these, and without that powder it
doesn't work properly. In chinese it's called 速溶蓬灰 sùróngpénghuī but I have no idea
what it is in English. I've tried several times to find out, but never came up with a definitive
answer. A couple of websites I've seen seem to claim that if you let the dough sit for a long
enough time, it has the same effect, but I have never been able to get this to work, and all the
attempts I've made at making 拉面 without 速溶蓬灰 have failed.

I can't help you too much with a specific recipe as we used to make up big batches at a time
(enough for 300-400 bowls of noodles), and we never used measured quantities, just adding more or
less water/powder as needed. However the basic steps involved are:

1) Coat bench top in oil.
2) Place flour in a mound on the bench
3) Make a deep "volcano" hole in the top of the mound (i.e a hole going to the table and
surrounded on all sides by flour.
3) Slowly add water to the flour by pouring it into the hole in the flour and then mixing the
flour in on top of it. You basically try to use the minimum amount of water necessary to achieve
viable doughy consistency, and so you should add a little bit of water then mix it in. Add a
little bit of water, then mix it in, etc etc.
4) Once you have dough that you can knead, knead it out so that it is thin and flat (don't make it
too thin, just as long as the surface area is reasonably even.
5) Sprinkle a small amount of the 速溶蓬灰 over the surface of the dough, and then fold the
dough back in on itself and continue to knead it.
6) Knead, knead, knead (adding more oil to the table top as necessary).
7) After a while, roll the dough out into a thickish, cylindrical shape. Grab the ends and pull
them out, and then wave your hands up and down, causing the center of the dough to bang on the
table a little bit like a whip (it may take several attempts to get the correct technique for
this). Then bring the ends together and give them a twist, causing the dough itself to twist up.
This explanation is a bit awkward, but if you've ever seen someone making 拉面 you should
understand what I mean.
8)Knead, roll, bang, twist. Knead, roll, bang, twist. (add more oil to the table top as necessary).
9)Continue until the dough reaches the correct look and feel. I imagine it would be really
difficult to know what this is unless you have someone to show you, and you've practiced it a few
times. Basically it should have a yellowish-tinge, and feel slightly elasticky. The dough itself
should also be smooth. Kneading too little or too much will result in noodles that don't pull.
10) Break off enough dough for one bowl of noodles.
11) Roll into a thin cylindrical shape.
12) Grab the ends and pull them out.
13) Bring the ends back together, holding them with just one hand, and making a sort of triangle
(the base of the triangle will be on the bench, and the tip will be made by the two ends that have
come together.
14) Insert fingers into the middle space made by the triangle.
15) Pull up with the hand that is holding the tip of the triangle, and then pull both hands out.
(Pulling up rather than out at the beginning is the key to getting an even and smooth pull).
16) Use a lighter version of the "bang" technique mentioned above to bounce the noodles up and
down.
17) Repeat steps 13-16 in quick succession 5-6 times (depending on how thick/thin you want the
noodles). Doing it too slowly will cause the noodles to sag and break.
18) Bring the ends of the noodles together a final time, and then break off the top.
19) Place noodles in boiling water, and boil for 2-3 minutes.
20) Take the noodles out, add whatever topping/sauce/flavouring you like
21) Eat and enjoy.

As you can see, making 拉面 is far more involved than just having the correct recipe. There is
also a reasonable amount of technique required. Steps 7-9 and 12-17 took me quite a few attempts
before I got them right, and I had someone there with me showing me how to do it. I also had
plenty of fresh dough to practice with. Unfortunately, you can't just take a piece of dough and
practice and practice with it until you get it right, because this will cause the dough to become
over-kneaded. Each time I was practising with a piece of dough, I was only allowed to use it for a
few minutes before the person teaching me would take it off me and give me a new piece. The piece
I had been using would then always be used to make the next bowl of noodles. Occasionally, if it
had be worked too much, it would snap when pulled (usually after the 4-5th pull), and so the cook
would gradually cut that dough back in to fresher dough, small pieces at a time.

For the reasons listed above, I imagine it would be quite difficult to learn this just from
following a recipe you find on the internet/from a book. Your best bet would be to try and find a
place that makes them, and then ask the cook if he can teach you.










flameproof -

Have you tried to google for "速溶蓬灰" (Prompt dissolve beef noodle additive)

One link is this:
http://item.eachnet.com/prd/detail_p...83664425649612



Also:
http://weiri-china.en.alibaba.com/of..._additive.html

The read here about Kansui:
http://www.instantramen.or.jp/englis...outline12.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramen

The key sentence: Eggs may also be substituted for kansui.

I would not use any chemicals in food, specially chemicals from China which may or may not be
tainted. Just use eggs.










liuzhou -



Quote:

Just use eggs.

Take your pick.










flameproof -

Fake eggs is an urban myth. I suggest you use Chinese news reports with caution.

http://www.tian.cc/2007/05/hoax-chin...feit-eggs.html










imron -

Yes, google was the first place I went when trying to find the English name for it.
As for scary looking chemicals in bags with Chinese lettering, how about this one for





Yes, Sodium Chloride AKA table salt.

Ok, some people will point out that salt is also not necessarily that good for you, but my point
is that just because it's a white, powdered "chemical" (and yes salt is a chemical), doesn't make
it somehow bad.

That being said, I really don't know how safe 速溶蓬灰 is as an additive, I just know that
almost every 拉面 maker in China will use it. To a noodle-cook it's no different than adding
salt to a meal. True, China doesn't have a great track record with foods and food additives, and
MSG is still used in most dishes cooked over here, so that's not to say 速溶蓬灰 is healthy or
good for you, but I don't think it's any more a cause for concern than say salt, MSG or any other
"chemical" that is routinely added to foods.

Of course, if you can find evidence to the contrary, then I'd love to hear it.










flameproof -

It's a chemical that is used to save cost (I presume) and to make the dough safer (fresh eggs may
go bad fast). If I do it at home I would stick to eggs. Same for MSG, it's used to cut cost and
skill.

If you can't get the stuff I would try eggs first. If I really need that stuff I would probably
try Metro first.

BTW, I also would not oil the table and rather use flour to prevent dough getting stuck to the
table top. Oil will just end up in the noodles and increase the calories count. I haven't done
noodles but I do pizza frequently (with no eggs in the dough).

PS: you may come to the conclusion that eggs don't work. But don't judge that quick. I think the
noodle making skill is quite special and needs some experience.










imron -

I'll give eggs a try next time I get around to making them. Although my technique isn't great,
it's good enough to tell if the dough will work. I can actually get a few pulls using just normal
dough from flour and water, but noodles from that kind of dough will just break during pulling if
you want the noodles long or thin.

I used to always use flour to prevent the dough from sticking, but since learning to make 拉面 I
tend to prefer oil and the texture it gives to the dough, even when making other foods. I'm not
bothered by extra calories.

Regarding 速溶蓬灰 I'm guessing it's probably the same as kansui. I should add, that the
powder is also often added to water, and it's the water that is sprinkled instead of the powder
itself. The wikipedia article mentioned that it gives a yellow-tinge to the dough (just like
速溶蓬灰) and also that it's alkaline (same as 速溶蓬灰). The other article mentions it's
been in use in China for 2000 years. Now obviously I'll take that number will a large grain of
salt (har har), but that would suggest it's not just some modern, cost-saving expedient.












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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Speak Chinese - translation for my tattoo -








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translation for my tattoo
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Page 1 of 2 1 2 >






...DJKT... -

Does anybody know what this means??? Please I can't find the meaning anywhere

1.JPG



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imron -

It means good fortune and is pronounced zhǐ.










...DJKT... -

Thanks

Can you read this one...










Myriam -

生現 shēng xiàn : I would translate it as "Carpe Diem", Live in the present, Seize the day

生命 shēng mìng, life
現在 xiàn zài, present, now

By typing "shengxian" with the pinyin input the first result I get is 聖賢.










Lu -

I'm not sure if 生現 is correct Chinese. I think not, I don't recall ever seeing this
word/expression. Best wait for the opinion of a native speaker.










...DJKT... -

I was told it meant "To Live For Today" would that be correct?










karen -

Lu is right. Sorry to say that these 2 characters are not used together as a word. But still you
can read and interpret them seperately. Both have good meanings as explained in posts above.










Myriam -

I can't believe there's no word for "To Live For Today" in Chinese philosophy.

NB : If you decide to tatoo your body with this phrase in Chinese, I won't feel responsible for
it! I just want to know how to say Carpe Diem in Chinese.










skylee -

For "to live for today", consider "活在當下".










liuzhou -

Carpe Diem

及时行乐












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Saturday, December 6, 2008

Learn mandarin - Strange 姓 (as in not too common) - Page 2 -








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Strange 姓 (as in not too common)
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muyongshi -

I thought of another one 段. Every time he introduces himself he first says how uncommon his name
is.



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imron -



Quote:

I thought of another one 段

This is the surname of my landlord, and also of my Taiji instructor's wife.










LiYuanXi -

I have a friend with the surname 龚. It's an official surname but it's not so common.










Lu -

There's a Dutch/Chinese writer/translator with the surname 龚. And I think I once had a teacher
with that name? but not sure.
段 is also not that uncommon I think, came across the name a few times in texts and books.

I like this thread, people come up with uncommon surnames and then other people go 'I know someone
by that name!' :-) I once had a friend surnamed 聶 and he said that was an uncommon surname, but
at the same time he had a good friend also named 聶.










cdn_in_bj -

There are also some double character surnames which are not too common, but probably not as rare
as some of the single-character surnames that have already been mentioned in this thread. And I'm
not referring to the "new" surnames given to children that are a combination of the surnames of
the parents. It would be interesting to find out the history behind the ancient double-character
surnames.










aeon -

My wife's surname is 伍 and I also 'borrow' it for my Chinese name. I was told by one of my
teacher's in Beijing that 伍 isn't a surname. So I reminded him of 伍子胥...










fireball9261 -

How about 繆 (miao4)? My father's best friend had this last name. I think it's quite uncommon. I
also heard some one's last name was "第五", and it was actually listed in the book of "One
Hundred Surnames".










zhwj -

第伍 was mentioned in a recent report on the name 苟, which some villagers wanted to restore to
their former surname, 敬. They'd apparently been forced to change it when the emperor made that
character taboo, and they've been stuck with a homophone for 狗 ever since.

The article has a picture of some children with the surname 第伍, the only name remaining out of
what used to be a complete series of names 第一 to 第八.










fireball9261 -

I wouldn't mind to have a surname of 第一 (number 1) since I am rarely 第一 in anything. Just
imagine a person with last name of 第一 and the first name of 人 (person), and he would
introduce himself, "My name is 第一人."










zozzen -

鮑 is not rarely used surname in hong kong. Several actors are surnamed 鮑, like 鮑方.

The most embarrassing surname may be 愛. 一些愛新覺羅的後人將姓氏改成 「愛」,
人家問你貴姓, 只好答:「我姓愛」(homophone to "I have sex" )












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Friday, December 5, 2008

Pnyin - Lack of equivalents in English/Chinese -








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Lack of equivalents in English/Chinese
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chyilande -

There was a similar thread to this one in translation section, but the question there only
referred to words like ipod and other technical inventions. I'm more interested in words for
feelings, concepts, etc. where a lack of equivalents stems from differences in cultures. Such as
cheesy, sarcasm, xenophobia..
If you have such examples in either languages (lack of equivalents for Chinese words too!), please
bring them on! And if there are people versed in other languages (Japanese, Korean..), and find
some similarities with Chinese in either lacking the right expression for an English word or not
finding the right way to translate some words into English, please give your input, your help will
be much appreciated!



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JasonTsia -

utility (in the sense of the quality of being of practical use or, in economics, a measure that is
to be maximized in any situation involving choice)
I can't find any concept equivalent to utility in Chinese culture.










muyongshi -

http://www. /showthread.php?t=128

Been talked about....

And is it really that big of a surprise that languages will have different concepts/words that are
difficult let alone impossible to translate??










gougou -

Closing. Feel free to add to the thread muyongshi provided.












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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - HSK *character* lists - Page 4 -








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HSK *character* lists
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Page 4 of 4 First < 23 4






renzhe -

Wow. Did you do that by hand? Impressive.

I've had a look at it in mnemosyne, and it seems to work fine.

Do you mind if I add it to the mnemosyne Chinese-HSK database and put it on the project website?
Most people interested in HSK levels tend to use simplified characters, but I'm sure that plenty
of people will find it useful.

I notice that you slightly changed the back of the flashcards (using ';' instead of '/') etc. Do
you mind if I change them back when adding it to the Mnemosyne Chinese-HSK database, for
consistency's sake?

EDIT: And if you don't mind, please shoot me your name and email (privately) so I can credit you
properly for the work.



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ABCinChina -

Thanks, but my Chinese coworker helped me out on this one. He had some crazy software which only
works on Chinese versions of Excel that did the changes automatically and also very accurately I
might add. All I had to do was figure out how to get the lists aligned so that I could cut and
paste the Traditional characters over the Simplified ones.

As for putting it up on the website or changing it back for consistency, of course I don't mind
since it might be of use to our community of Chinese learners.










renzhe -

Great, thanks! I'll add it to the Mnemosyne database and upload it soon. I'll also try to see
whether I can update the KDE-edu files to include traditional characters. This is also something
people have been asking for, but it will take a bit longer. Still much easier than doing it all
myself, so thanks for your help!












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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Chinese Studies - A pen that reads chinese? -








> Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology
A pen that reads chinese?
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mirgcire -

I saw a picture in the local newspaper of a guy holding a cigar like thing over a book, and the
caption said something like 'Chinese Ambassador XYZ presents a pen that reads chinese as a gift to
someone important". Does anyone know of such a device? It sounds pretty cool. If it had an LED
read out with pinyin and english, that would be spectacular.



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gato -

Someone asked about this a while ago:
http://www. /showth...&highlight=pen
Chinese scanning dictionary pen?










ZhouNuosi -

Would it still be spectacular if we all lost our jobs because of that pen?
Sinologists should be hoping that pen is rubbish..

We're being replaced by technology!










chabuduo -

I'm thinking that this kind of device would only stand to save someone a bit of time by providing
them with character recognition, pinyin, and maybe a definition or two. But I'd still prefer to
double check the characters manually in my 现代汉语词典:2002年增补本.
Whilst on that topic, does anyone know of a dictionary better than the aforementioned, for general
purpose use?

As for the translation properties of the pen, I wouldn't be too excited, or worried (depending on
your profession) as English/Chinese (vice-versa) translating technologies are still no match for
humans.










imron -



Quote:

But I'd still prefer to double check the characters manually in my
现代汉语词典:2002年增补本.
Whilst on that topic, does anyone know of a dictionary better than the aforementioned, for general
purpose use?

Nope. That dictionary rocks. I have the same 2002 edition albeit it is now literally held together
by tape.










chabuduo -

Same here, but with rubber-bands too.












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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Chinese language - Nankai University / Tianjin / & Concerns -








> Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools
Nankai University / Tianjin / & Concerns
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9thExtreme -

I have always been planning to live in China, as I love the chinese martial arts, and their
culture. Right now I am in my first year in a Canadian college, majoring in Asian Studies
(emphasis on Mandarin), but I am just not enjoying my studies very much. Lately I have been
wondering why I am putting off going to china until after I graduate, and looking into studying in
China. I would really like to live in Tianjin (I have heard good things, but more importantly I
want to study under a martial artist there), but am finding chinese university sites difficult to
navigate. I need to know how to enroll, being a foreign student, the ins and outs of the visa
situation, degree options, work load etc. I am looking at Nankai Uni in particular, if anyone
could help out here I would really appreciate it.

Also, if I wanted to teach english later, how would Chinese employers treat a foreigner with a
degree from a chinese university; is it better to have a degree from Canada? And is it as easy to
get into Chinese unis as I have heard, or should I be concerned about getting really good grades
at my current college.

thanks alot



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9thExtreme -

Ok, stupid questions I agree. I shouldve looked around more. I'll rephrase this.

Whats the best way to study mandarin in Tianjin? what institutions can provide me with a visa, and
what kind of degree could I get? I just want to get over there. Please tell me how!!












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Sunday, November 23, 2008

Study Chinese - 摇滚:rock or rock-and-roll? - Page 3 -








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摇滚:rock or rock-and-roll?
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Page 3 of 3 < 12 3






0021com -

摇滚:rock or rock-and-roll?


you just say 摇滚rock
it is more easy
rock-and-roll is so long to express



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wushijiao -



Quote:

Is Elvis's music Rockabilly?

In part. But the Cat King was so much more.

By the way, below is a great NPR overview of Rockabilly, which I will take the liberty as
translating as 罗克阿比尔梨音乐。

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...oryId=15184887










Ari 桑 -

As for you guys talking about rock in china, theres plenty plenty plenty of great rock in china
right now. And I would say that where it may lack in quantity compared to japan, in by and large
definitely surpasses in quality. I have been to a decent number of shows in beijing, all of which
have had at least two or more great bands. The Modern Sky record label has lots of great stuff.
Most of china's rock that I listen to is more indie. As for punk and metal, I'm not sure how the
scene is. But there is definitely a good amount of artsy indie stuff thats just fantastic. Two of
my favorites are 周先生 and 木马。










madizi -



Quote:

The Chinese are used to listening to sugary pop music, which are similar to pre-1960 rock era
ballads in the West. It's too much of a leap to go from pop ballads to punk or death metal.

So, does that mean that wild 60s are coming to China? With sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll?












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Saturday, November 22, 2008

Study Chinese - Which dialect is this? -








> Learning Chinese > Non-Mandarin Chinese
Which dialect is this?
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Myriam -





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muyongshi -

It's not a dialect, it's standard mandarin spoken with a very neutral accent. And the accent is
definitely not Shandong.

Why do you think it's a dialect?










gato -

She's talking about the song at the beginning. It's like 贤良 by 苏阳, probably Shaaxi dialect.
http://echannel.benq.com.cn/information/xianliang.mp3
贤良 by 苏阳










Littleweed -

I did a little research. It says it's North-West dialect. Ning2xia4 area.
Hope this helps you.










heartless -

The language the singer said before the song begins is mandarin with slight northern accent. The
song is definitely not in Dongbei dialect, but some mixture of North west accents, and the singer
used mainly dialect spoken in Ningxia province.










WangYuHong -

Darn my reading comprehension...
For a couple days, I thought the other messages in the discussion were saying the beginning song
in the initial video was that song posted later. Now I just re-read it and saw they say that it's
similar to that song... Oh well...

I asked my wife about the song in the initial video. It's called 好汉歌, by 刘欢。
好汉歌

She says it's from the TV Series taken from the famous novel "Outlaws of the Marsh" or 水浒传.
That song has a Shandong accent to it (although it's still sung in 普通话).


That second song that was linked, she said that one sounds more like a 陕西 accent (still
普通话 though).










fireball9261 -

It did sound a little like Shangdong, but I think the way it was sung was more like Qin Qiang
(Shanxi folk songs). And I checked the singer's home province, and he was from Ningxia 宁夏. It
is located at the China's north west side and close to Shanxi and Shaanxi. It was sung in Mandarin
with a mild Ningxia accent. I like his style, and I think I am going to get his CD's.












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Friday, November 21, 2008

Learning Mandarin - Henan Dengfeng Shaolin Epo Wushu College -








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Henan Dengfeng Shaolin Epo Wushu College
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4Fisher4 -

I would like to go and learn Kung fu in China for a couple of years and was wondering if anyone
has gone to this school. If not I was wondering if anyone could point me in a good direction for a
kunf fu school that is cheap, somewhere around $12,000 for two year... at most! I was wondering
about training in the shaolin temple but was informed that it probably isn't the best way to
study... though I would really enjoy learning shaolin martial arts. If anyone could help me I
would be very appreciative. If you would like to check out the schools website it is
http://www.shaolinepo.com/en1/index.html thanks!



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gougou -

Make sure you are prepared for the real China...










zozzen -



Quote:

$12,000 for two year.

you mean US$120000 or RMB12000?

The monthly school fee there is RMB1000-RMB5000 which include all meals, accomodation and tuition
fee. If you need a private toilet and smaller class (1 mentor for around 5 students) , expect to
pay at least RMB3000 . Some famous schools like Epo charged more.

For a year long program, a big discount is offered but I haven't bargained for that. Though local
students pay RMB5000-15000 per year only, international students are usually charged more, because
of the cost for translation, smaller class and the FACT that they expect you are much richer. One
of my french schoolmate paid RMB12000 per year which is quite a good offer.

If you plan to stay there for a year, expect annual school fee not more than RMB15000. (you have
to make a hard bargain), and spare some pocket money to buy water and snacks, which cost
RMB100-1000 per month, depending on how you spend your leisure time.












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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Chinese Studies - Which Chinese invention had the most impact? -








> Chinese Culture > Chinese History
Which Chinese invention had the most impact?
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View Poll Results: Which Chinese invention had the most profound impact on the modern world?
Paper 8 38.10%
Paper money/Credit cards 0 0%
Mariner's compass 0 0%
Gunpowder 5 23.81%
Printing press/moveable type 6 28.57%
Seismograph 0 0%
All of the above 2 9.52%
Voters: 21. You may not vote on this poll



Page 1 of 2 1 2 >






bhchao -

Which Chinese invention do you think had the most profound impact on the development of the modern
world?

Some of the most important inventions were invented during Han dynasty, but were not "modernized"
into practical application until Tang and Song times. Gunpowder was invented during Han, began to
be utilized for military purposes during Tang, and reached a high point during Song in the form of
cannons and hand grenades.

The compass was invented for astronomical purposes during Han, and later used for seafaring
purposes during Song. The Arab world may have beaten the Song in creating the first mariner
compass. Later the compass spread to Europe and played a key role in discovering the New World.

Cai Lun invented the paper during the Han dynasty. Later, Chinese POWs from the Battle of Talas
taught the Arabs at Samarkand how to create paper. The Arab world spread this knowledge to Europe
via trade.

The world's first paper money was created during the Song dynasty, starting in Sichuan province.
Urbanization and entrepreneurial activity defined city life in Song times. Merchants could buy on
credit without having cash in their pockets.

The printing press and moveable type invented during Song provided the prototype for Guttenberg's
moveable type enhancement. Guttenberg's moveable type played an important role in spreading
religious ideas across Europe. This was instrumental in the development of the nation-state across
religious lines in Europe.

Finally a seismograph created during the Han dynasty provided advance warnings of an earthquake. A
device contained a dragon's mouth with a ball inside. When the earth shook, the ball would roll
out to the direction of the earthquake's epicenter.



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muyongshi -

This is a freakin' hard question. They had all had such a large impact but in many different ways.
Of course you could argue that gunpowder wouldn't have had such a large impact with out the
compass because then they wouldn't know where to go to kill people. But the boat wouldn't have
existed without the instruction manual on paper

Okay so I'm being fasictios (spelling) but I will have to really think about this one. My gut
instinct is gunpowder due to literal physical impact that was used up until nukes and oh wait we
still use it. So I guess the impact I am looking at is the human factor.... I'll vote after some
more thought...










Senzhi -

Looking at the title of this post, I can't help but say: gunpowder

More seriously, I believe the abacus (as we know today) was also a Chinese invention, which helped
improve trade.










chenpv -

All six inventions are unarguably among the most outstanding achievements in human history for
having enhanced our understandings of some underlying natural/social laws as well as our abilities
in governing this world. In this perspective, any one of the inventions listed above deserves no
more, or less, historical significance than the others.

However, I gave my final vote to paper. It doesn't mean that I favored knowledge propagation over
other findings, but simply because, when considering 'the most profound impact on the development
of the modern world', I personally think paper today has already transcended the primitive
application as a medium for knowledge propagation. Unlike other inventions, which acted as
specific solutions to distinct problems, paper and paper-making brought people to a more primary
idea of economy and efficiency, in not only information carrying but also compartmentalization of
different matters. Therefore, in today's world, 'paper', which possibly gave rise to the concepts
like 'membrane', 'layer' and so on, is not exclusively found to be made from wood or grass, or
used in printing, but has gained applications in other areas, such as paper money, package,
surface protector etc.










CheukMo -

Paper, the mariners compass, and moveable type all had a substantial impact on world history.
However, gunpowder changed the world completely. For at least two centuries gunpowder and which
group or country had the best weapons using gunpowder defined which countries had the most power.
The many empires that ruled most of the world in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries and the first
half of the 20th century was very much defined by who had the best weapons that used gunpowder.

卓武










ChouDoufu -

My vote goes to the movable-type press. It's invention led directly to the education of everyone
alive today. Before movable type, the masses were unable to afford a book, let alone read it. With
it, everyone with opportunity and an inkling can learn as much (or as little) as they want. I'd
also like to add that basically, the entire corpus of human knowledge was made possible by movable
type. Is that really less significant than another way to kill people?

Compass is second. Try flying on a plane, using a gps device or doing much of anything without one.

Paper money: every culture had something that worked as a unit of exchange. While extremely
useful, it is not anywhere as world changing as movable type. Paper money, in my opinion, didn't
really become useful until it stopped being tied to commodities like gold and silver.

Paper: useful, but there were alternatives, like papyrus in the Middle East. SIlk was used quite
extensively, in China, too.

Gunpowder goes last for the effect it has had in killing people and destroying cultures. I have
trouble naming anything good that has come from gunpowder.










muyongshi -



Quote:

Gunpowder goes last for the effect it has had in killing people and destroying cultures. I have
trouble naming anything good that has come from gunpowder.

Whether it was a good impact or not there is no denying the massive impact it did have.

I have to agree with Cheuk Mo on this that it literally did change the face of the world and so my
vote goes there but with a very very close second to paper, and then the compass, and then the
printing press. I think the credit card/paper money type of idea was already circulating and would
have found a way whether the Chinese invented it or not so that is very low on my list.










Lugubert -

I voted paper. Movable type and the printing press are out in my book, because the way I
understand history, the methods didn't spread from China but were independently invented in Europe.










muyongshi -



Quote:

I voted paper. Movable type and the printing press are out in my book, because the way I
understand history, the methods didn't spread from China but were independently invented in Europe.

Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the Egyptians create their own form of paper as well? I thought
paper was also one of those developed independently as well in Europe.

Aside from that I would have to agree. They did good at inventing them earlier than others but
failed to gain the usage over the world.










zozzen -

among the best known companies of paper, gunpowder, compass and printing machine how many of them
are chinese? (hmmm i know most of them should be manufactured in china) :p












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