Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Speak Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Guide to Beijing (北京)

Thread: Guide to Beijing (北京)
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Guide to Beijing (北京)

Contents

* Bookstores
* Transportation
  o Taxi
    - A word about unlicensed taxis
    - Fares
    - Taxi Etiquette

  o Subway
  o City Bus
  o Airport Shuttle Bus
  o Inter-city Bus
  o Inter-city Train

* Short-term Affordable Housing

[top]Bookstores

* All Sages Bookstore 万圣书园, address: 成府路 (on the south side of Qinghua University
  campus) (the best selection of academic-oriented and literary books in Beijing) (a number of
  very nice cafes nearby, including the in-house Thinker's Cafe (醒客咖啡))
* 风入松 bookstore, selection of books similar to All Sages. Near the south gate of Beijing
  University.
* For Chinese learning material try the BLCU bookstore at the south gate of BLCU University; the
  Wangfujing Bookstore (just north of the subway, 3rd Floor (?); or the Foreign Languages
  Bookstore, ground floor, further north on Wangfujing.The latter two are also sources of English
  language reading material.

[top]Transportation

[top]Taxi

Taxis are plentiful here and compared to most western countries getting around by taxi is quite
cheap. But it is not the cheapest nor always the fastest option for getting around the city and
many drivers cannot speak English. So make sure you know how to say in Putonghua where you're
going, or have it written down in Chinese to show the driver.

[top]A word about unlicensed taxis

The first thing to note is that all legitimate and licensed taxis will have license plates
starting with "京B". Anything else is an unlicensed taxi (or "black car" as the locals refer to
them). Many of these unlicensed taxis look like real taxis, and even have working meters, so
always check the license plate before getting into a car. There are also unlicensed cars that
don't even try to look like a taxi and don't have a meter, you will often see these cars parked
outside of subway stations.

If you're arriving at the Capital Airport, there is a taxi queue outside of the arrivals lounge.
You should go there to take a taxi. If someone approaches you from within the terminal and offers
you a taxi, it most likely will be for an unlicensed car.

[top]Fares

Fares are always metered here.

During the day, flag fall is 10 RMB, this includes the first 3 km. Each additional km is charged
at 2 RMB, in increments of 1 RMB. Over 20 km the per-km rate goes up by 20%.

After 11pm at night, the fares increase. Flag fall becomes 11 RMB and the per-km rate 2.40 RMB.
The surcharge for longer distances also applies. As you can see, taking the taxi late at night can
become quite a bit more expensive.

There may still be taxis that have a base rate of 2.40 RMB/km, these cars are usually black in
colour (not to be confused with the unlicensed "black cars") and a bit larger than the regular
taxis. In any case, the base per-km rate will always be displayed on the rear windows of the taxi.

There is also a rate for idling, so being stuck in a traffic jam will also increase the fare.

As for "getting taken on the scenic route", many drivers here are honest but sometimes it does
happen. The best way to protect yourself from this is to know the route to your destination and
tell it to the driver. But do note that due to how the roads are laid out in Beijing and the
traffic rules, what seems like the best route isn't always possible. For example, it is forbidden
to make left turns at most intersections on Chang An Avenue prior to 11pm. So the driver may
suggest an alternative route and this is ok. So long as you don't come off as a total newbie, they
will think twice about cheating the foreigner.

Before getting out of the taxi, don't forget to get your receipt. You'll need it for claiming
expenses, and even if you aren't, it's generally good practise to do so in case you leave
something behind in the car.

[top]Taxi Etiquette

If you're carrying luggage, especially the type with wheels/rollers, the driver may ask and even
insist that you put your luggage in the trunk. This is ok, he doesn't want to steal your luggage -
he's just trying to keep his car clean for the next passenger.

Eating in a cab is generally frowned-upon, but the driver is unlikely to say anything so long as
you're not eating messy food.

If you're a smoker, taxis here are non-smoking, so don't. Likewise, if a driver decides to light
up you can ask him to stop.

In the summer, if it's hot outside you can ask the driver to turn on the A/C if he hasn't already.

Finally, taxi drivers here can and do get fined for traffic violations. In addition to the fine
(which starts at 200 RMB and up depending on the violation), he will also get a short suspension
from his job. There are also lots of traffic cameras throughout the city. So don't get mad if the
driver refuses to make an illegal u-turn or to let you out of the car somewhere that he isn't
allowed to stop.

[top]Subway

As of the opening of Line 5, the fare for riding the subway has dropped to 2 RMB. This includes
transfers between the lines. You can pay using one-time tickets, or by using a card that you can
store credit on ("yi ka tong").

It does get incredibly crowded on weekdays during rush hour, so if you value your personal space,
you should take this into consideration.

Here are the subway lines that are currently in operation:
* Line 1 - runs east-west along Chang An Avenue
* Batong Line - this is an extension of Line 1 to the east, with transfer stations at Sihui and
  Sihui Dong. This line will take you to Tongzhou and beyond.
* Line 2 (aka - "loop" line) - this is a closed loop running around the 2nd ring road north of
  Chang An Avenue, and just south of Chang An Avenue.
* Line 5 - newly opened line (10/2007), runs north-south and intersects Line 13, Line 2, and
  Line 1.
* Line 13 - this is another loop on top of Line 5, terminal stations at Xizhimen and Dongzhimen

[top]City Bus

(To do)

[top]Airport Shuttle Bus

An alternative to taking a taxi into the city from Capital Airport is to take the Airport Shuttle
Bus. It is very affordable at 16RMB per person, per trip and there are 5 routes to choose from. If
you're not getting off at the terminating stop, then make sure the driver knows and try to sit
near the front of the bus so you don't miss his announcement for your stop. You can also take the
shuttle bus to get to the airport, but the routes and stops are a bit different. See here for more
information and a map of the routes and stops for both directions.

[top]Inter-city Bus

[top]Inter-city Train

[top]Short-term Affordable Housing

If you have no desire to stay in a 5-star hotel, here are some short-term housing options that are
more affordable and have gotten good feedback from forum members.
* Hejia binguan 和家宾馆 – good hotel option next to BLCU 和家宾馆北四环店
  海淀区 成府路 东升园 七条 华清家园 (北四环保福寺桥向北300米再向东
  100米)
  Phone: 82629055
* 365Inn has two locations in Beijing. One member has reported positive experiences with the
  branch by BNU. There is also a Qianmen branch
* Home Inn has about 35 locations all over Beijing, price range is RMB 200-300. It is quite busy
  and you need to book in advance!
You can also use the following sites to search for hotels.
* ctrip.com
* eLong
* Sinohotel

====================================================================================================

Contributors: cdn_in_bj, muyongshi, gato, roddy, flameproof
Created by muyongshi, 9th October 2007 at 06:21 PM
Last edited by cdn_in_bj, 18th March 2008 at 09:15 AM
1 Comments , 1853 Views

Discussion

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 25th March 2008, 08:56 AM

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New Chinese language interfaces

Views: 908

Posted By ipsi()

Re: New Chinese language interfaces

Ah well. Fair enough.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 25th March 2008, 08:48 AM

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New Chinese language interfaces

Views: 908

Posted By ipsi()

Re: New Chinese language interfaces

Is it possible for this to be set as a board preference rather than as a cookie? I notice that
every time I use a new computer I have to set the language to Chinese, as it defaults to US. Which
would...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Chinese Character - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 12th April 2008, 12:14 AM

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comparing the study of Chinese and Arabic

Views: 840

Posted By Quest

Re: comparing the study of Chinese and Arabic

You can choose any major city to stay in in China. There will be plenty of opportunities to hear
standard Mandarin (there will be some accentual differences in different cities) nowadays
everywhere....

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What other languages do we speak

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Posted By madizi

Re: What other languages do we speak

English, Chinese, some German, Serbo-Croatian, few Japanese sentences and few Italian words.

Oh, and learned Latin one year. But the only thing that I remember at this moment is: "Pecunia non
olet."...

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Speak Chinese - i've seen this in a comic - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

i've seen this in a comic
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Jill77 -

Any idea about the meaning?

thanks

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skylee -

西

It means "Spain". Very bad handwriting.

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Chinese Mandarin - Chinese poetry - Page 15 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Art and Literature

Chinese poetry
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Sam Addington -

Quote:

A traveler longs for returning home on the Han Jiang River.

Once again, I didn't like reading too much into the poem. Why translate "long for" when the
original is simply 思?

Also the original is 江汉. I believe this is a very specific location. Some translations
suggested "between the Jiang and the Han rivers." However, the Han River empties into the 长江in
Wuhan. Wouldn't this be the more likely scenario?

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Sam Addington -

I like the image of not being able to lock spring into the garden. I think I would incorporate
that into a "final" translation. Although "lock" goes beyond the original 关.

studentyoung -

Quote:

This seems to be the standard translation. However I was trying avoid interpretation of the words
as much as possible. It has often been said of Western poetry that it is philosophical and perhaps
a bit pendantic whereas Chinese poetry is subtle and relies more on the reader's wits to fill in
the gaps. I was trying to respect this principle. Granted "reign" is a fairly loaded word, but it
is frequently applied to mountains in Western poetry. I suppose "are there" would be the best
translation, but it is somehow clumsy.

In fact, the poet tried to tell that the country was collapsed while the land remained the same.
The contrast was so big, that he felt every thing in front of him was so familiar while so strange.

Quote:

One translation suggests an association with the word green -- the green deepens. I like this
better than the idea that the city is overgrown in weeds. I guess this is due to my own
observations of spring. In fact, the grass does not become "deep" until later in the summer.
Spring grass is all beat down by the previous winter's snow. Of course I have no idea of the
climate in Chang'an ... I assume the climate in Chang'an is fairly temperate. It is certainly not
tropical. In 1967, forty years ago, the city of Detroit experienced a "war" of its own when much
of the central city was burned to the ground. To this day you can still see vast areas of vacant
lots in the center of the city. Although the grasses grow high in the summer, the trees have not
deepened. Perhaps in the tropics trees would take over in forty years, but not in this climate.
(Of course now days we have lawnmowers.)

Sigh ~ ~! At that time, the poet lamented the collapse of his country and the bitterness his
country fellows suffered. He used the word “深” to describe grass and tresses overgrew
everywhere, which made them look rather dense. “深” here means “too dense to see
through.” In a word, the capital was desolate at that time.

Quote:

“国破山河在,城春草木深。”开篇即写春望所见:国都沦陷,城池残破,�
��然山河依旧,可是乱草遍地,林木苍苍。一个“破”字,使人怵目惊心,�
�而一个“深”字,令人满目凄然。司马光说:“‘山河在’,明无余物矣;
‘草木深’,明无人矣。”(《温公续诗话》)诗人在此明为写景,实为抒�
��,寄情于物,托感于景,为全诗创造了气氛。

http://zhidao.baidu.com/question/5292576.html

Quote:

How long was the An Shi rebellion?

It lasted for four years.

Quote:

安史之乱自唐玄宗天宝十四年至唐代宗宝应元年(755~759年)结束,前后达4
年之久。

http://baike.baidu.com/view/2795.htm

Quote:

Was the capital totally abandoned during that period? Certainly the everyday folk remained behind
to maintain somewhat the capital?

The capital Chang’an was abandoned during that period, because the royal family escaped. All
most all residents there left the city. Can you image what is 十室九空?

Quote:

Then again, the deep growth of trees could have all been in the poet's mind. He, after all, was
away at war.

But he was caught on the way to follow the royal family by the rebel army, and he was taken to
Chang’an.

Quote:

唐肃宗至德元载(756)六月,安史叛军攻下唐都长安。七月,杜甫听到唐肃�
��在灵武即位的消息,便把家小安顿在鄜州的羌村,去投奔肃宗。途中为叛�
�俘获,带到长安。因他官卑职微,未被囚禁。《春望》写于次年三月。

http://baike.baidu.com/view/2795.htm

Quote:

Quote:

A traveler longs for returning home on the Han Jiang River.

Once again, I didn't like reading too much into the poem. Why translate "long for" when the
original is simply 思?

He was dying to go home, but he couldn’t. I think “think of” seems not so strong to express
his feelings.

Quote:

诗人长期飘零,历尽艰辛,至老仍如浮云行止无定,心中颇多感慨。

http://cache.baidu.com/c?m=9d78d513d...c55&user=baidu

Quote:

Also the original is 江汉. I believe this is a very specific location. Some translations
suggested "between the Jiang and the Han rivers." However, the Han River empties into the 长江in
Wuhan. Wouldn't this be the more likely scenario?

Sorry, I made a mistake. I thought that at that time he was on the Hanjiang River. But according
to the fact, he was in Gong’an, Hubei province.

Quote:

大历三年(768)秋,杜甫漂泊至湖北公安。这里地处长江、汉水之间,所以�
��题作《江汉》。

http://cache.baidu.com/c?m=9d78d513d...c55&user=baidu

Cheers!

Sam Addington -

So I take it you feel it is okay to supply the meanings the poet only alludes to in the original.

realmayo -

Just wanted to say thanks to "Student" who posted a couple of pages back recommending this book:
"How to Read Classical Chinese Poetry: a Guided Anthology" by Zong-qi Cai (ed)
http://www.amazon.com/How-Read-Chine...5522981&sr=8-1

Initial thoughts: I like it a lot. Appears to offer a skin-deep guide to the 100s of years of
classical chinese poetry, via presenting and writing about 140-ish individual (and I assume
representative) poems. A fairly unintimidating way in to all this stuff.

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Chinese School - NewsinChinese Registration - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > Adsotrans.com Forum

NewsinChinese Registration
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yukikuni -

hello, maybe it is just me but i am having a hard time looking for where to register or login into
NewsinChinese.com. i also read on the adsotran.com/blog that some of the chinese classical
literatures are annotated and if possible you could tell me where exactly i can read the annotated
literate. sorry for any inconvenience!

thanks

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trevelyan -

Registration isn't necessary for reading. The manually annotated texts are arranged by difficulty
level, and can be found on the right-hand column. ie:

Newbie -> http://adsotrans.com/newsinchinese/taxonomy/term/16
Elementary -> http://adsotrans.com/newsinchinese/taxonomy/term/18
Intermediate -> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0303120346.htm
Upper-Intermediate -> http://adsotrans.com/newsinchinese/taxonomy/term/20
Advanced -> http://adsotrans.com/newsinchinese/taxonomy/term/21

The really fun stuff starts at the intermediate level, imho.

Registration is only really useful for two things: (1) enabling "click-to-add" mode for ChinesePod
(clicking on words adds them to ChinesePod vocab lists), or (2) switching the entire site to
traditional characters. I guess non-ChinesePod users might want (2), in which case the best thing
to do is just sign up for an account at ChinesePod and then re-use the same login.

I should stick up a note making this more clear. Didn't do this at first as I'd assumed only CPod
users would want to sign in. Cheers,

--dave

trevelyan -

If anyone wants to enable traditional support, they'll need to create an account. Since not
everyone may have a ChinesePod account, I've just enabled anonymous account registration.

yukikuni -

Dear Dave,

you've always been helpful and quick to responding questions or concerns, which is much
appreciated. recently, i've noticed that newsinchinese.com has not been converting the articles
into traditional chinese after preferences have been set to traditional characters. i know Xinhua
news is originally in simplified, which may be the reason why it is still in simplified even with
the adjusted preferences. could you please let me know how or where i could read articles that are
specifically annotated in traditional chinese, thanks!!

trevelyan -

yukikuni,

I took a look at this yesterday (day before?) and think the problem is fixed (it seems fixed for
me). Are you still having the problem? Am planning to overhaul the site, and include NewsinChinese
as part of something bigger. If people are still having problems I'll take a look though.

Best,

--dave

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Speak Chinese - Podcasts other than antiwave - Page 7 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Resources and General Study Issues

Podcasts other than antiwave
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imron -

I listened to a bit of this today, not too bad, and it's nice to hear a slightly different accent.
It reminds me of 灵珊's accent from《奋斗》. Incidentally, her website seems to be down.

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realmayo -

yes I like them loads. they used to be daily but shorter ... meaning you'd have to listen to that
theme music booming out every four mins...

realmayo -

oh, someone transcribed & 嗯 translated a couple of them 喔
http://www.chineseblast.com/search/node/remy
拜拜!

bagz007 -

Totally echo your thoughts on Heimi Gongzhu, Roddy. I usually go two or three months without
listening and then catch up with consecutive podcasts. I like her new, longer format. Also, she
cracks me up sometimes when she gets animated on a subject or takes a fairly unique view on
something. A couple of quick examples that come to mind are how she totally trashed Chinese new
year and then ripped on a homophobic listener who was complaining about her show...sometimes, she
starts rambling without purpose, but other moments like these are gold.

Also, gotta say that Deguo zhisheng is getting stale...they need to seriously inject it with some
soft stories or something, man. Once you get past the headlines and the first hard story, I'm on
snooze mode....it doesn't help that the user feedback segment is also banal and predictable as
hell...would be nice to see something more along the lines of "Morning Edition" on NPR....

roddy -

Actually I suspect one of the reasons I like it is that as she's in Austria she's taking a
foreigner's perspective on things, which is something that foreigners in China can relate to -
like in the most recent show, asking the restaurant boss to 'make it properly, not like you make
it for the foreigners' and talking about how foreigners don't like tofu.

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese Class - Quick translation please (How to ask someone out on lunch) - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Quick translation please (How to ask someone out on lunch)
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Lu -

It seems to depend on where you are. In Taiwan, addressing a young woman as 美女 is often
completely acceptable, for example when addressing an audience as '各位帥哥美女', or when
the breakfast shop laobanniang today called back a young man who forgot his cup: 'Hallo, 帥哥'.

Quote:

If she happens to speak one of the many Chinese languages/dialects other than Mandarin, she
certainly won't understand you

Most people in China understand Mandarin, as it is the official language and they learn it in
school. If she grew up in China and made it to university, she certainly speaks Mandarin.

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muyongshi -

I second all Lu said....

Quote:

If she happens to speak one of the many Chinese languages/dialects other than Mandarin, she
certainly won't understand you

And even if it is a dialect and doesn't know mandarin who says she won't understand??? In
sichuanhua it would be said "mei nv yao bu gein wo yi qie ci fan" which is very close to mandarin
(sorry I don't know how to represent the sounds very well, just know what they are)

dsrguru -

True, certain dialects (like Sichuanhua) are more mutually intelligible with Standard Mandarin. I
was referring more to the less mutually intelligible languages like Cantonese and Taiwanhua. My
use of "certainly" was a poor choice of word since the woman in question might well have been
educated in China or Taiwan in which case she most probably would understand Putonghua. When I
read the original post, I got the impression that she was of Chinese ethnicity but not necessarily
that she actually came from China (i.e. an ABC or the equivalent for the OP's country). My point
was that the OP would make a fool of himself if he didn't first teach himself Mandarin
pronunciation and that there isn't just one spoken Chinese language.

skylee -

I heard it on the radio today and I thought "Finally !!" ->
廣東肇慶:導遊不得以“帥哥”“靚女”稱呼遊客

Quote:

“標準服務語言”中規定,對成年男性要稱呼“先生”,對境外男性要慎用�
��能引起歧義的“同志”稱呼,禁止使用目前民間較為俗氣的“靚仔”、“�
�哥”等稱呼;對成年女性稱呼“小姐”,忌用“美女”、“靚女”,對年紀
較大的女性忌稱“阿姨”。

Lu -

Who complained, and why? I might fully agree with them, am just curious.

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Chinese Studies - 1314 and other numbers expressing love - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

1314 and other numbers expressing love
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Lu -

Both people in the south of China and people in Taiwan confuse l and n. So the nin => ling
connecting might have come from either. (In Taiwanese, 你 is pronouced li.)

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xiaomawang -

1314 should be 一生一世 ba.

Quest -

Quote:

Both people in the south of China and people in Taiwan confuse l and n. So the nin => ling
connecting might have come from either. (In Taiwanese, 你 is pronouced li.)

If it were that precise, you can't form any code at all.

Chunn -

I think this is very creative way of Chinese people to use short message. I have seen they use
this kind of code with those old style pager which could only display numbers, not alphabets. And
they could convey many meanings especially about love.

xtenhome -

you can use numbers as writing such as

520 for I love you

does anyone know what is meant if the reply is

5202

Also what other numbers are there ?

such as 1314 for "for ever and ever" (yi sheng yi shi")

roddy -

Merging with similar topic . . .

Lu -

Quote:

you can use numbers as writing such as
520 for I love you
does anyone know what is meant if the reply is
5202

I'm guessing this means 我愛你too => I love you too. But that's just guessing.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Learn mandarin - Dialect Characters方言字: 尕 and 玍 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Non-Mandarin Chinese

Dialect Characters方言字: 尕 and 玍
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Xi'Er Dun -

I already know what these Chinese Dialect Characters: 尕 "ga"--small, and 玍 "ga"--naughty,
mean. 玍 is generally seen as 玍子 "ga.zi" meaning a naughty or bad person. Could someone
though tell me if they know which Chinese Dialects these come from and are used in? Maybe this is
way to obscure, someone may know though.

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monto -

尕( "ga"--small) is of North-western dialect (西北方言) according to the 《辞海》。
For 玍 ("ga"--naughty), havn't found the authoritic answer, but I think it's of the area
around Hebei Province,what we call “华北地区”。There is a film called 《小兵张嘎》,
a story of a naughty kid becoming hero in the Anti-jap war. and 嘎 = 玍

Xi'Er Dun -

Thanks for the reply, that's really interesting, by "Xibei Fangyan 西北方言" do you mean
"GansuHua 甘肃话" or even "LanzhouHua兰州话"?

monto -

Talking about 方言, 西北 includes 陕甘宁 (Shaanxi, Gansu and Ningxia) as the main.

Some 方言 is not restricted to only a city or a province.

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Learn Chinese - your most exciting food (both chinese and the west)...... - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Food

your most exciting food (both chinese and the west)......
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zozzen -

Quote:

Not sure whether Qinghai'd work for mussels and fries, though

i think not, but pour 孜然粉, 辣椒粉, 五味粉 and salt over the fries. Tell them it's from
Sichuan, they'll like it. I ate similar fries in a sichuan restaurant. The baking method and the
way they cut potato is very Belgian. Bake them first until the surface goes a little bit brown,
put them into refrig for over an hour, and deep fry them when you need it. The only difference is
the spicies.

The most successful one I made is mini version of blooming onion, with 五味粉, 辣椒粉 and
salt. (no giant onion can be bought in my city). Frankly it's not really tasty, but that's enough
to amaze everyone, including some europeans who didn't see it before.

The better way is to serve it in Russian way, offering different small courses just like a fine
dining restaurants. A bowl of mussels are supposed to be shared by many people, not just one. Also
use more vegetables to add color and extensively use beloved Sichuanese spicies (very chinese).

But not every of us knows how to cook, making dessert is an easier way to show off.
Among them Tiramisu is the greatest. Tiramisu seems to be getting famous in China, many only heard
its name, and some tried a fake one only (with cream cheese). If you're in big city, you should be
able to find out Mascarpone cheese and Lady's fingers to make a classic one.

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flameproof -

Quote:

Not sure whether Qinghai'd work for mussels and fries, though

I wouldn't worry, I don't think many Chinese know that it's landlocked, or could find it on a map.
They just know it's far. That's good enough.

Quote:

Among them Tiramisu is the greatest.

That ain't that easy to make. Good luck with that!

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Chinese Online Class - ZDT: Most annoying things about the ZDT - Page 6 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > ZDT Flashcards Forum

ZDT: Most annoying things about the ZDT
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jbradfor -

First, I recommended to save in Unicode format, not Unicode-8 format, to read in with UTF-16.

Second, the list of words below contains an error:
太太 bu4
ZDT seems smart enough to do a bit of sanity checking on the words being imported; alas, when it
finds a problem, it doesn't always handle it the best, as you noted when the import stopped half
way through.

Third, attached is a file that ZDT will import. File encoding should be UTF-16, Import format
should be 'S P' (since you have simplified characters). HOWEVER, for reasons unknown to me, it
will only import 3 of the 4 words. Chris???

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flameproof -

I forgot one really annoying thing which maybe can be corrected:

I can copy only one line from the search results. If a search have, let's say 3 hits, I can copy
only one at a time.

Luobot -

Quote:

I can copy only one line from the search results. If a search have, let's say 3 hits, I can copy
only one at a time.

Try clicking the 1st line and then shift-clicking, say, the 3rd line. All 3 lines should be
highlighted. Then you can copy them. I do it all the time in the dictionary. It also works in the
flash card lists.

What's interesting is that in the flash card list, you can "select all" and then do a copy, which
copies all, but you can't do a "select all" in the dictionary. No big deal, though, as you can
select the first row and the last row, as I described above, but a "select all" in the dictionary
would be consistent and remove one step.

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Learn Mandarin online - Help me with my English name!~ - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Help me with my English name!~
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Luobot -

Quote:

This is strange. For me, Leo brings to mind a lion and nothing else, definitely not a free bird.
And Leo Liu sounds strange and reminds me of Humbert Humbert in Lolita.

Ouch. There goes my 包子. Let me see if I can salvage this …

How about Leon Liu or Lenny Liu or Leonardo Liu?

Still sounds more like a lion than a free bird? … then how about Jay (as in blue jay) … Jay
Liu?

Woo, this is a tough flock! I’m flying this coop!

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ABCinChina -

Quote:

This is strange. For me, Leo brings to mind a lion and nothing else, definitely not a free bird.
And Leo Liu sounds strange and reminds me of Humbert Humbert in Lolita.

How about Flyberto?

Lu -

Alliterating names always sound a bit strange to me, but it seems to happen quite a lot when
Chinese people pick a name that corresponds to their family name instead of to their given name.
Li Oufan => Leo Ou-fan Lee comes to mind.

I'd go with either Chaowu (since that is your name already) or Charles. Charles Liu, sounds good,
decent English name. Won't go out of style, yet you won't run into a lot of people with the same
name.

heifeng -

oooh, just thought of one (other than pinyin since that is a very good option)

Chaowu~~ 'Clive' Liu....that's a cool name!

imron -

Quote:

Alliterating names always sound a bit strange to me,

Yeah, I agree with this. I'd try to choose a first name that doesn't begin with the same letter as
your last name.

dufresne -

Quote:

And Leo Liu sounds strange and reminds me of Humbert Humbert in Lolita.

Oh,That's a problem I didn't notice.
Clive is nice.
Thanks for your help.

renzhe -

If your name is Chao Wu, you could look for an English name that sounds roughly like Chao Wu.

Joey
Jerry
George
Charlie

I feel that it's the simplest and least painful way. Those who know you well can pronounce your
name properly, others use the English variant which sounds close enough.

I've seen many Chinese born people pick a really awesome sounding word with awesome connotations
as their name, but it often sounds really odd as a given name. Like "Hawk" or "Falcon" or
"Celeste". It is really unfortunate. How can you take someone seriously if their name is "Falcon"?

renzhe -

Quote:

This is strange. For me, Leo brings to mind a lion and nothing else, definitely not a free bird.

It always reminds me of Leo Tolstoy.

Most people will probably be reminded of Leonardo di Caprio, though...

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Speak Chinese - 普遍來說 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

普遍來說
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82riceballs -

Quote:

普遍來說,科學界認為過去五十年可觀察的氣候改變很可能是由人類活動所�
��動。

wikipedia

“普遍來說“是 "in general" 或“一般來說“的意思嗎?

also from the same article:

Quote:

預計全球變暖所因致事件的數量和強度...

what do the red words mean?

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skylee -

Quote:

“普遍來說“是 "in general" 或“一般來說“的意思嗎?

yes. it means "generally speaking".

Quote:

Quote:
預計全球變暖所因致事件的數量和強度...

what do the red words mean?

Most probably it is a typo. should be 所引致. 全球變暖所引致事件 = cases caused by
global warming

PS - I've just read the original sentence. I think it is incomplete.

82riceballs -

thanks a lot, skylee!

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Chinese language - desperate translation needed!! - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

desperate translation needed!!
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alasdair -

dunno what this means at all, can someone please translate it? 我是最好的
sorry if this is the wrong forum

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sanguo-online -

means ' I am the best'

myrhlyn -

my translator says"i am best"
babelfish translation software

tiffsmith -

I am hoping someone who knows their stuff will answer you soon so that I may see if my translation
is correct. I think it says "I am most good of" Or "I am the best".

skylee -

Indeed it means "I am the best".

CheukMo -

Quote:

Re: desperate translation needed!!

I am hoping someone who knows their stuff will answer you soon so that I may see if my translation
is correct. I think it says "I am most good of" Or "I am the best".

Very good! I need to study a lot more...

tiffsmith -

Quote:

Very good! I need to study a lot more...

Thanks, but I can't take too much credit for that... I used a dictionary.

alasdair -

thank you all

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Chinese language - online general interest reading? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

online general interest reading?
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Pravit -

I kind of enjoy reading the selections in the HSK reading section - decently interesting short to
medium length articles on a variety of topics. I'm assuming they write everything in the HSK
themselves, but perhaps this is similar reading material online(for native speakers) I could read
every day? I read articles on Baidu news sometimes, but find most of them incredibly boring.

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gato -

"General interest" is kind of general, but you might find 三联生活周刊 (Life Week)
interesting. It's a bit like Time magazine.
http://www.lifeweek.com.cn/

There's also 南方周末 (Southern Weekend), which aims at a somewhat more intellectual set.
http://www.nanfangdaily.com.cn/zm/20070308/

Pravit -

Exactly the type of thing I was looking for. Thanks, gato!

Anyone know of any other such sites? Is there something similar to "Reader's Digest" in China?

studentyoung -

Quote:

Anyone know of any other such sites? Is there something similar to "Reader's Digest" in China?

Yes! Try this site, please. -> http://www.dzwz.org/ (读者文摘)

Thanks!

grimacekid -

Quote:

There's also 南方周末 (Southern Weekend), which aims at a somewhat more intellectual set.

南方周末 is my favoriate news paper, Pravit, try that!

venture160 -

you can also try 南方都市周刊

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 14th February 2007, 06:06 PM

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New Unanswered Posts function

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Posted By imron

Re: New Unanswered Posts function

Perhaps you could make it disregard Yahoo! Slurp Spiders ( 1388 ), Google AdSense Spiders (2),
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comparing the study of Chinese and Arabic

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Posted By Quest

Re: comparing the study of Chinese and Arabic

You can choose any major city to stay in in China. There will be plenty of opportunities to hear
standard Mandarin (there will be some accentual differences in different cities) nowadays
everywhere....

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What other languages do we speak

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Re: What other languages do we speak

English, Chinese, some German, Serbo-Croatian, few Japanese sentences and few Italian words.

Oh, and learned Latin one year. But the only thing that I remember at this moment is: "Pecunia non
olet."...

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