Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Learning Mandarin - Chinese Lesson




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Living in China


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

Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 3rd March 2008, 07:50 AM

Replies: 5

Traditional Support

Views: 305

Posted By trevelyan


Re: Traditional Support

Thanks to pressure from Mark at toshuo.com, the annotation engine is now outputting popups in
traditional characters (when input is traditional characters). Will be working on hooking up the
editing...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 18th February 2008, 12:34 AM

Replies: 5

Traditional Support

Views: 305

Posted By trevelyan


Re: Traditional Support

I'm generally happy to let people use the adso materials commercially provided they attribute the
materials and contribute back to the project. I don't think it's onerous to send an email asking
for...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 17th February 2008, 09:01 PM

Replies: 5

Traditional Support

Views: 305

Posted By trevelyan


Re: Traditional Support

The academic team at ChinesePod is using some Adso-related tools to help with lesson preparation,
which is helping us flag some of the issues that still exist with duoyinci and pushing forward
the...



Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 17th February 2008, 06:21 PM

Replies: 5

Traditional Support

Views: 305

Posted By trevelyan


Traditional Support

We've fixed the issues with automatic traditional character recognition that character pointed out
in another thread. The updated code (and database) is available for download. Anything from
version...



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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson




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Forum: Speaking and Listening 24th February 2005, 06:57 PM

Replies: 43

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

Views: 6,910

Posted By johnmck


Jo-Ann, try the web site:...

Jo-Ann, try the web site: http://www.polyglot-learn-language.com/ it will allows to find a pen-pal
who speaks Chinese and wants to learn English (or any other language you can speak). Using the...



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Monday, December 22, 2008

Chinese Character - Chinese Lesson




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

Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th July 2006, 09:30 PM

Replies: 44

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

Views: 7,920

Posted By RobAnt


Surely the key to learning anything, and...

Surely the key to learning anything, and particularly a language, is to relax and have fun.

Don't consider learning Chinese to be a series of lessons, but simply a lot of fun. I love it when
my...



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Sunday, December 21, 2008

HSK - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.04 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: zhuang

Forum: Speaking and Listening 3rd February 2005, 10:40 PM

Replies: 12

Online pinyin dictionary with audio pinyin prnunciation

Views: 9,731

Posted By zhuang


Pinyin textbook

Hi,
I don't know any online dictionary in pinyin, but I can recommend a textbook which uses pinyin
only. It is a beginners'textbook entitled: Chinese in 3 months, by Hugh Baker. If you are
looking...



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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson




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Showing results 1 to 10 of 10
Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: ala

Forum: Speaking and Listening 12th June 2004, 11:39 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


No, if there is no glottal stop, then you get the...

No, if there is no glottal stop, then you get the Mandarin and Cantonese wu (a pure /u/). It's
still different from the English woo, although it doesn't sound at all like the English
pronunciation...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 11th June 2004, 10:46 PM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


Well that's what I have been saying all along! ...

Well that's what I have been saying all along! If u is wu, then lu is lwu. There is no glottal
stop before the /u/ in Mandarin, so it sounds like there is a w consonant, but there isn't.
Whereas...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 11th June 2004, 09:29 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


Please provide a reliable source stating there is...

Please provide a reliable source stating there is a consonant w before /u/ in pinyin wu. I'm
pretty sick of discussing to a wall.



Forum: Speaking and Listening 10th June 2004, 04:15 PM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


No, there is no extra w in the sound wu. If...

No, there is no extra w in the sound wu. If there is, then lu will be lwu too. It is simply /u/.



Forum: Speaking and Listening 3rd June 2004, 11:18 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


glottal stops can occur before consonants as...

glottal stops can occur before consonants as well.

一、医、乌、安、愿、凹、碗 等 in Wu dialects have glottal stop initials.

每、拿、拉 等 in Wu dialects have glottal stop initials as well.

One of the most common...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th April 2004, 02:32 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


yup that's what I meant. not that the v is a...

yup that's what I meant. not that the v is a lisp.



Forum: Speaking and Listening 7th April 2004, 01:36 PM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


所谓“把一些带 w [ u ] 的音,读成 v ”,并不是英语那种唇齿摩擦音 [ v ]...

所谓“把一些带 w [ u ] 的音,读成 v ”,并不是英语那种唇齿摩擦音 [ v ]
。它只是在合口呼零声母的位置上出现了轻微的唇齿动作,丝毫没有摩擦音�
��痕迹。唇齿无擦通音国际音标是花体的
http://chinese.pku.edu.cn/bbs/attachments/F4bhXQ_v.gif.

Calling it a "v" will give people the wrong...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th March 2004, 11:18 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


Exactly.

Exactly.



Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th March 2004, 06:46 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


Um no, you are wrong. What I believe also...

Um no, you are wrong. What I believe also happens to be the official interpretation of Standard
Mandarin Chinese used in the PRC.

You are confusing tone 2 with y and w. In nonstandard speech, yes...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th March 2004, 05:43 AM

Replies: 51

how is wu pronounced?

Views: 5,601

Posted By ala


The pinyin wu is tricky. I think the w- is not...

The pinyin wu is tricky. I think the w- is not pronounced at all if followed by an /u/. 乌鸦 is
pronounced uya without the w. 中午 is sometimes slurred (because of the -ng in 中), and you
have a w ish...



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Friday, December 19, 2008

Learn Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Forum: Speaking and Listening 26th June 2004, 07:32 AM

Replies: 55

Married to a Chinese in the U.S.?

Views: 7,036

Posted By nosferatu2083


I totally disagree with the first part. There are...

I totally disagree with the first part. There are attractive girls in every nationality. I know,
because living in a culturally diverse place like Los Angeles, I have seen just about every...



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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Search took 0.02 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: ruxuan

Forum: Speaking and Listening 7th March 2006, 07:48 AM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By ruxuan


learn the spirits of chinese

"我爱死你了"is the meaning of i love you very much in china.we rarely say it as
"我爱你死了"。"shaolaopo" can be expressed as my younger wife of my wives.



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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Chinese Pinyin - Chinese Lesson



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

Forum: Speaking and Listening 7th July 2007, 06:28 PM

Replies: 62

Why do caucasians love English?

Views: 4,214

Posted By Xiao Kui


Re: Why do caucasians love English?

I don't have the problem of picking up other foreigner's accents by conversing with them in
Chinese or hearing them converse in Chinese. There isn't enough exposure in those short exchanges
to pick...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 5th July 2007, 10:24 PM

Replies: 62

Why do caucasians love English?

Views: 4,214

Posted By Xiao Kui


Re: Why do caucasians love English?

I wholeheartedly disagree. Also the speakers could be just honoring a language pledge
(http://www. /showthread.php?t=16350&highlight=language+pledge)

If you're Caucasian then...



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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Learning Chinese - Chinese Lesson




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Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th September 2004, 07:35 PM

Replies: 63

Practicing Chinese with Chinese is impossible!!!

Views: 9,598

Posted By website


Discrimination

This topic is interesting. I just want to add a couple of things.

1. When I traveled in Paris several years, I found people wanted to speak
French even if they spoke English.

2. Another behavior...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th September 2004, 02:53 PM

Replies: 63

Practicing Chinese with Chinese is impossible!!!

Views: 9,598

Posted By website


English

I'll jump in and add my two cents to this thread.

First of all I think a 5 star hotel that uses English
with foreign visitors in a world-class city like Hong Kong
is different from a store that
uses...



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Monday, December 15, 2008

Chinese Pinyin - Chinese Lesson




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Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th August 2005, 10:38 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By in_lab


Shibo, thanks for recording the sentence. I know...

Shibo, thanks for recording the sentence. I know you were speaking slowly to make things clear,
but they all sound forced. Why not just say it naturally, and don't worry about getting it right?

I...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 12th August 2005, 01:06 PM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By in_lab


That sounded good! Once you get the tones down,...

That sounded good! Once you get the tones down, it will be great. It makes me want to try
recording myself. Last time I tried that, I wasn't very successful. I couldn't stand hearing my
voice. :-?



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Sunday, December 14, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson




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

Forum: Speaking and Listening 9th March 2007, 11:50 AM

Replies: 75

New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (下)

Views: 12,291

Posted By flameproof


Re: New Antiwave Podcast 超级难说6 - 猪年为何不能说猪?

That is very different from Cantonese people, which like fins with no fish.



That type is pretty much the worst type vegetarian you can get. I can't understand the logic
behind it too, if you are a...



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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Chinese Character - Chinese Lesson




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Showing results 1 to 5 of 5
Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: ala

Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th February 2006, 07:57 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala


I like Taiwan Mandarin (Guoyu), which sounds more...

I like Taiwan Mandarin (Guoyu), which sounds more natural and conversational.
Beijing Mandarin (Putonghua) sometimes sounds really pretentious in a communist/proletariat sort
of way. Hard to...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 12:02 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala


That's still highly speculative. Cantonese...

That's still highly speculative. Cantonese people generally have very high cheek bones (at least
relative to the rest of the Chinese population), and much of Chinese pop culture comes from Hong...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 06:55 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala


the "double" eyelid fold (双眼皮) being...

the "double" eyelid fold (双眼皮) being preferred is not a product of Western civilization
influences, it was preferred a thousand years ago. There are hundreds of millions of Chinese with
the...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 01:09 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala


they probably were arguing. :wink: shanghainese...

they probably were arguing. :wink:
shanghainese isn't known for being loud and argy bargy, it's a 吴侬软语 (wunong ruanyu)
dialect, part of the same family as suzhou-hua. in fact, shanghainese today is...



Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th January 2006, 11:53 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala


Shanghainese is much faster than Mandarin;...

Shanghainese is much faster than Mandarin; syllable distinction is very muddled in Shanghainese,
it's much more word-based compared to other Chinese dialects. Single syllables by themselves
usually...



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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Study Chinese - The difference between 'q' and 'ch' -








> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
The difference between 'q' and 'ch'
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jiasen -

Hey everyone. This is my first post in these forms, and I would like to commend you all on what a
brilliant forum you have here.

I hope this hasn't already been covered (I did a quick search). I am having problems in
distinguishing between the pronoucing of 'ch' and 'q'. To my ear, ch and q sound both like the
english 'ch' sound. However whenever i try to pronounce words using 'ch', a chinese speaker will
tell me I am saying 'q' instead of 'ch'.

I can pronouce 'c' perfectly, but I'm not sure how that would translate into pronoucing 'ch'. Any
help in this area would be much appreciated.



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zeiss -

The way to pronouce 'ch' is just like 'zh', 'sh' and 'r'. Maybe pronoucing 'r' is easier for you.
It soulds like 'ge' in the word 'garage'. I can't input the phonetic symbol here, which looks like
[3].

The difference between 'q' and 'ch' is similar to that between [i] and [3] in English, I think.

Maybe here is your mistake. Take two chinese words for example, say '七'(seven) and '吃'(eat),
the chinise "pinyin" of which are [qi] and [chi] respectively. We pronounce the 'i' in [qi] just
like the english phonetic symbol 'i', but we DO NOT pronouce the 'i' in [chi]. So, you can just
pronounce the word '吃' [ch].
I hope it's helpful for you.










heifeng -

maybe this will help a bit










gougou -

Also check this table for audio samples.










Lu -

Do you have a tutor? Try asking her/him, they should be able to explain it better than can be done
in writing.
Pinyin q sounds like the English ch; c sounds like ts. Pinyin ch is c but as a retroflex, meaning
that you have to curl your tongue backwards while saying c to produce ch. The same goes for sh, zh
and r: curl tongue backwards.

I hope this helps.










lokki -

I agree that the sinosplice site referenced above is the best place to go to find out.

These can be rather tricky to get right by just listening to how it "sounds". The secret lies in
knowing some of the physical details, like where the tongue goes and in what part of the mouth the
sound is actually formed. THEN practice and listen a lot to get it just right.

Once you have the general idea it can be useful to practice short sentences where you have to
switch between the two tongue positions a lot, like zh, j, sh, q, ch ... in succession (back,
forward, back, forward,...).










mirgcire -

If you feel the roof of your mouth with your tongue you will notice some ridges or bumps just
behind the teeth. This is the aveolar ridge.

When you make the zh, sh, ch and r sounds, your tongue should be just behind the aveolar ridge,
and sound is made by constricting the air between the tip of the tongue and the roof of the mouth.

When you make the j, x, and q sounds the tongue is placed on the aveolar ridge, near the teeth.
The sound is made by restricting the air between the surface of the the tongue and the aveolar
ridge.

The z, c, and s sounds are made with the tonge even farther forward restricting the air between
the teeth and the surface of the tongue.

Here are some good words for practicing tongue position: xian sheng (先生), jin zhang (紧张),
and chu qu (出去).










self-taught-mba -

Down and dirty rule:

1. first understand j and zh since we have very close English equivalents:

j like "jeep"
zh like "German"

2. Then apply to q/ch

q is to j as ch is to zh. the q and j sounds are "sharper"

3. Attend attend universities in Beijing through our service ---shameless plug










Lu -



Quote:

zh like "German"

That's good enough an approximation if you just want to make yourself understood on a trip in
China, but if you want to learn good Chinese, you need to know that zh is not actually pronounced
like g in German.










self-taught-mba -

Yep, that's why it's a "down and dirty" rule.

But it also depends on whose saying it. Some people sound remarkably on, after explaining it that
way. (followed up by a few imitations of their tutor to do the trick for good)

And for all the BLCU'ers I meet that learn it only by imitation, I venture to say that both are
needed (easily understood comparison and imitation).

Anyway, my point was first know the j/zh difference (since they are easier for native english
speakers) then find the q/ch












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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Where do i go in China to learn intensively Mandarin? -








> Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools
Where do i go in China to learn intensively Mandarin?
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pdsola -

I have been studying mandarin with a tutor 3 hours a week for a year now (She is chinese and
speaks english "OK" so ive been getting a good idea of the language). Im intending to go to China
beginings of next year to study the language. With the basic idea i have of the language Id like
to chose the city/program that suits the correct enviroment to learn as fast as posible. I
understand that it depends on my effort and how much time Im gonna dedicate to the program and Im
fully compromised to do what is necesary. I wanna chose a city with the least foreigners to avoid
talking english or spanish as much as posible. I have two years to learn as much as i can and i
want to make them count.

So with these objectives i have in mind wich would be the right place to go? Please tell me about
your experiences and what level and can hope to get from dedicating myself 100% to studying the 2
years.



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littleknight23 -

I am a native Chinese. I have a friend who comes from Sweden, he is studying Chinese in Chengdu.
He says there are only two Swedes, including himself, in his school so he has little chances to
speak Swedish, then both of his English and Chinese are improving quickly.

Many foreigners come to Beijing to study mandarin Chinese. If you do not want to go to a city
where there are too many foreigners, you do need to cancel Beijing from your list.

Shanghai is another large city of China. For the same reason, you had better ignore it.

Xian is another major city of China. It’s also time-honored. There must be few foreigners there.

Guangzhou is also one of the largest cities of China, but I won’t suggest you go there for your
study. As most of the local people speak Cantonese in daily life—even though you can not
understand it! Cantonese is the dialect of Chinese spoken in Canton and neighboring provinces and
in Hong Kong and elsewhere outside China. Most of our Chinese form other provinces can not
understand it. It won’t be helpful for your mandarin Chinese studying.

Suzhou won’t be a nice choice. As there are many foreigners there.

It seems Chengdu will be a better place. The foreigners living/studying in Xian must be more that
those living/studying in Chengdu.

Maybe Jinan is also a nice choice.


Sorry for my poor English. But I am sure that you can get me.

If any other questions you can also contact me at my email and MSN
MSN: littleknight23@hotmail.com
Email: littleknight23@163.com










gougou -



Quote:

If any other questions you can also contact me at my email and MSN

Or preferably, here in the forums, so others can benefit from your responses as well!










simonlaing -

I would go to a small city in the northeast. or a nanjing.

You need a place with good tones, and one with few enough westerners that you really can
concerntrate on the language.
You will need to fight the urge to learn Bar Chinese every night or earn money through part time
English teaching jobs.

Look for an established program with decent rankings from ex students and national level.

Be ready to work hard. "Learning Chinese is a 5 year lesson in patience." At the end of 5 years
you still haven't completely learned Chinese but you know patience.

Roddy is in Dalian, I have heard it is pretty and the people's speech is very standard. Though it
is cold in the winter. If you want a warmer place I advise my city of Nanjing to Study, which
altough having some wind chill in the winter and a bit of humidity in the summer is a fairly mild
city.

If you are truly passionate about it, it won't matter which good university you go to.

have fun,
Simon










Jamoldo -

Dalian is actually pretty nice given the sea breeze, far more mild than Beijing, I would say. But
that's just what I've heard, considering I was only in Dalian for the summer. But it's what people
have told me.

Dalian is fantastic. I'd suggest it for numerous reasons I've posted elsewhere (do a search on my
posts and you'll see it). Chengdu will have a bit of Sichuan-hua, though I've heard great things
about the city. Xi'an is a great place for culture and history.










PHILIP-LI -

I'm quite agree with Jamoldo. Dalian is an romantic city. I have studied here for 5 years.(I'm a
chinese student) Dalian is not too hot in summer and too cold in winter.there're lots of good
universities here.iIf you're interested in Dalian,I will tell you more!










pdsola -

I checked out Dalian and it seems like a very good option. One thing Im curious about though is
the accent, is it like the one from Beijing? cause ive heard of some cities that you will get a
particular accent that isnt common. My tutor is from Tianjin and she only recommends Beijing,
Shanghai and Tianjin. She is very stubborn and every time i mention another city she says
something like "they have a funny accent or its too far away or something of sorts..." I value her
recommendations but i rather take some from people who have studied and lived it.

Another thing, what University or Program you recommend in Dalian? The smaller the group in the
class the better i think, and what are the chances of living with a Chinese family? I think living
with chinese will accelerate my understanding of the language. Please give any suggestions in the
matter, Thanks










Suvlaco -

You might also like to look into Xi'an. It's a relatively large city with very few foreigners.

Having lived there for 5 months, I didn't meet any foreigners that lived there, and I went out to
public bars, clubs, uni's and parks a lot. I met several who were on holiday, but none living
there.

I'm going there to learn Chinese soon, starting uni on March 1 but arriving Dec 12. If you want
any more info let me know.










simonlaing -

The northeast has it's own local dialect language but most of the people I met from there it
doesn't affect their language.
In fact their tones and speaking might be better than beijing and Tianjin because those places
like to add er to the ends of most words.
Xian I have not spent much time but like Sichuan and other western provinces it probably has more
dialect affect on their mandarin speaking. Although as said before capital cities of provinces
this is less of a problem, I still think the northeast is the place to go. Also Beijing and
Shanghai you can be easily distracted by western food and western bar activities.

Good luck,
Simon










muyongshi -

I disagree on Xian. I know a few people that are from Xian and I find them to have one of the
better mandarin accents. Not heavily polluted by the er sound, but definitely no a southern style
of speaking like in Sichuan. And also I have been told that most people in Xian look down on
anyone who uses a dialect because they are "farmers".












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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Chinese School - how to speak a chinese text -








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how to speak a chinese text
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xuanthien -

Hello,

I am beginner in chinese. I find a text, a phrase in chinese. I like to know how to speak that
text. How can i do that. Is there any tool supporting that. I am learning online.

Thanks

Thien



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Hero Doug -

If you're able to copy and paste the text http://www.adsotrans.com/ should cover most of your
needs.

Kingsoft Powerword also works fairly well, you can hover over a word to see the translation. I
believe it costs money though.










johnmck -

Try DimSun on www.mandarintools.com










OracleBone -



Quote:

Kingsoft Powerword also works fairly well, you can hover over a word to see the translation. I
believe it costs money though.

I think Lingoes is much much better than Kingsoft Powerword. Besides, Lingoes is free.

http://www.lingoes.cn/zh/translator/download.htm










xuanthien -

Thank you all for quick replies. I have tried Kingsoft, it worked well. I also tried Lingoes but
all in chinese. Could you tell me how to use Lingoes. I will try Mandarintool too.

Thank you










OracleBone -



Quote:

I also tried Lingoes but all in chinese. Could you tell me how to use Lingoes. I will try
Mandarintool too.

1.open the main window of Lingoes.
2.click the link "设置..." in the left frame of the main window, then open the "系统设置"
dialog box.
3.There is a combo box "用户界面语言" where you can choose your favourite language.
4. You can download extra dictionaries from the homepage of Lingoes.
5. You can download Microsoft Simplified Chinese Voice Package, which provides the ability to
pronounce the Chinese characters in Lingoes.
http://www.lingoes.cn/download/tts/M...TTS_51_chs.msi

see other pronouncing plugins:
http://www.lingoes.cn/zh/translator/speech.htm

If you meet some trouble in reading the Chinese webpages of Lingoes, you may install Google
Toolbar which can translate the current webpage in your web browsers.










xuanthien -

Thank you OracleBone. Lingoes worked well.










usbabay -

Try this site. You can post Chinese text and listen to the how it is pronounced.
http://www.languagespace.com










xuanthien -

Thank you Usbabay. It is great , i can hear the sound.

Thien










zozzen -

haha, not sure if that's advert, but www.languagespace.com is really great.

I guess it's oddcast's technology. While the original site has a limitation on usage, the above
link seems to provide unlimited access.

Btw, please correct the typo in the site.












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Monday, December 8, 2008

Chinese Tutor - Non-native Accents in Chinese Speaking Speech -








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Non-native Accents in Chinese Speaking Speech
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Yiwan -

All the foreigner characters spoke the same stereotyped accent in the Chinese dramas I grew up
watching. I imagine there should be different accents out there just as there are a variety of
accents in speaking English. I wonder if there are any non-native accent samples available on the
web. Or any volunteer willing to contribute one? Thank you.



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haiying07 -

Maybe you can watch this TV play called : 武林外传 my own swordsman.
You will hear many different dialects . and the tv play is very intersting.










imron -

I think you misunderstand the OP. 武林外传 has many accents of native Chinese people. The OP
is looking for different accents of non-native speakers, when they speak Chinese.

Different accents definitely exist, but I don't know if there are any samples on the web. I used
to be able to pick out Korean, Japanese, Thai, French, German and well as English accents (thanks
to being in classes with people from those nationalities).










heifeng -

If anything, there are no shortage of foreigners speaking Chinese on TV. Even if you don't watch
the dramas, there are always some type of xiangsheng, or cultural programs, travel programs, or
chinese teaching programs that have some foreigner thrown in there somewhere...

Imron, what is that radio program with a french and irish guy...laowai kan zhongguo...something or
rather...Yiwan can just tune into that. Sometimes they even have other 'waiguo pengyou' on the
show as well....










imron -

It was 老外看点. You can listen to it online at this page. They only have an RM stream. Here's
a direct link to the most recent one.










corpose -

actually i like 康熙来了,thats a Taiwan talk show, invite different stars to this program
and i think it's funny and also could help u learn some Chines joke










ZhouNuosi -

Corpose, how can you like those?

my gf watches 康熙来了 all the time (she's from Bj) and whenever I sit next to her and watch
it too, I get this almost irresistable urge to smack something. those noises just drive me crazy

*pling* *ploing* *dong dong dong dong!!!!!* *piiiiiiiiiiiiiw* *tadadadadadaaaaaa*

but the urge disappears when I ty to imagine the guy responsible for those sounds, just pushing
some buttons backstage with a serious face, sipping his coffee while creating some party
atmosphere in the studio. something the creators of Family Guy would probably be able to make a
good parody on.










corpose -

lol,yeah, i admit that their r some weird sounds in that show,but sometimes its fun, such as when
they talk abt some ghost stories, hahaha,anyway, maybe u could ask ur gf to explain the joks in
that show, then u might find it is not 2 bad










liuzhou -

Although I first learned Chinese in Xi'an, I spent most of my early days in Hunan and picked up
the local accent. Even today, a decade later, although I now live in Guangxi, my wife's family
call me Chairman Mao because they swear I speak Putonghua just l like he did. With a strong Hunan
accent.

No, you can't have a tape.












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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Learning Mandarin - BOTM November 2007,《雷雨》 - Page 3 -








> Learning Chinese > Resources and General Study Issues > Book of the Month
BOTM November 2007,《雷雨》
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muyongshi -

Shouldn't tell me that....I might just have to quit

Why is it that all "great works" (or just even most authors) seem to be so 悲观 and love writing
these 悲剧?



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studentyoung -



Quote:

Shouldn't tell me that....I might just have to quit

Why is it that all "great works" (or just even most authors) seem to be so 悲观 and love writing
these 悲剧?

I understand how you feel, however, I here have one word for you in “Commemorating Miss Liu
Hezhen” by Luxun (鲁迅《记念刘和珍君》) as below.
真的猛士,敢于直面惨淡的人生,敢于正视淋漓的鲜血。
A true brave man dare face up to blue aspects and bloody scenes in life.

Hope you can feel better now! And cheer up, muyongshi!

Cheers!










imron -

Anyone else still reading this? There's still a week left :) I've just finished reading it now.










muyongshi -

I WILL FINISH...Now that Thanksgiving is over! I'm about a week behind but I should finish in a
week....










rob07 -

I wouldn't call this a "great work". I think it relies too much on cheap tricks for effect, what
with all the incest, death and madness. Still, it was fun I guess.

My favourite character was 鲁贵, he felt the most real. Such a scumbag! 周繁漪 had a very
passive negative presence, which I thought worked well. Gong Li seemed to take over the movie a
bit too much.

Imron, what did you think?










imron -



Quote:

I think it relies too much on cheap tricks for effect, what with all the incest, death and madness.

Yes, some of the story definitely felt like it was straight out of a bad TV soap opera, except
that it predates TV soaps by a few decades.



Quote:

I wouldn't call this a "great work".

It's considered to be one of the better plays written during that period, and to be fair, I think
that as a play it loses something when you read it as opposed to seeing it acted out.

Overall I quite liked it though, despite the fact that it's a tragedy.

I think I agree with you about favourite character, although I also liked 冲. The other
characters just didn't seem to have anything going for them that made you care too much about
them. With 鲁贵, being such a good-for-nothing at least made you despise him.










rob07 -

Yes, I liked 周冲 too. He and to a lesser extent 四凤 were innocents. They had no way of
knowing that events that happened long before they were born meant that they inevitably were going
to end up screwed. This makes the play classic tragedy in the Greek tradition and gives it most of
its narrative force.

This was what I was getting at when I said that 周繁漪 had a very passive negative presence,
which I thought worked well, and that Gong Li seemed to take over the movie a bit too much. Yes,
things haven't worked out that well for you since your step-son decided he didn't want to sleep
with you any more, but why should I care? From a narrative point of view, the evil deeds of the
past are scarier if they are left half veiled in shadow, and the focus is on how they continue to
blight the lives of future generations, rather than on how people who wrecked their lives years
ago continue to have wrecked lives.

I think one of the most interesting things about the play is that, as I understand it, it is one
of the first recognised Chinese literary works to show strong signs of Western influence. I
understand that 曹禺 was heavily influenced by Henrik Ibsen, and I think it is fair to say that
雷雨's roots are ancient Greek. I don't know much about Ibsen, but I think you can see his
influence in some of the other major writers of the period, particularly伤逝 by 魯迅.










muyongshi -

I can see that it has qualities to it and by the end was getting into it despite how painful it
was. The long dialogs are a bit hard to read rather than to see acted out and some of them were
just down right painful as characters like 鲁贵 and 周繁漪 rambled on. Kind of felt that the
father was a bit underdeveloped but I also felt like he was one of the more "real" characters as
well. Just living his life, hurts and all, and just hoping to kind of get old and die. You can
tell he loved his family and was concerned for all of them. 鲁贵 was also really real but you
can't like him for it. I think 周冲 and 四凤 were the embodiment of the entirety of the
tragedy. 周冲 with all the weight of the "sin" on his shoulders countered by 四凤 who was the
pure and innocent. Very interesting read.










chenpv -



Quote:

周冲 with all the weight of the "sin" on his shoulders countered by 四凤 who was the pure and
innocent.

Out of curiosity, what was Zhou Chong's sin and why do you think Sifeng was pure and innocent?










muyongshi -

No I'm not saying that he was guilty and she was innocent what I'm saying is that their characters
took on those roles. Meaning that he was weighed down heavy by depression and a type of guilt and
it represented all the mistakes of the entire family being piled onto him. And well si feng was
the opposite. She made him feel like there was something to live for and she was always portrayed
with kind of this feel of a young, lively girl.












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Saturday, December 6, 2008

Pnyin - And you thought biáng was complicated... (more weird characters) -








> Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing
And you thought biáng was complicated... (more weird characters)
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naturegirl -

Just came over a site with 22 of the most difficult and/or strange Chinese characters.
http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_46e815bb01000bw8.html
The site is in Chinese, but it's fascinating to see what weird characters exist or used to exist.
For example 一 (one) used to be written like this:

Or the original version of 雷 (thunder)


Betcha, the thunder was over before you finished writing it..

The mouth 口 used to be triangular... well but then people ate more and got bigger mouths, or
what?


Nothing left to say here...


But check out the site yourself!

*add* Title explanation: biáng is one of the most complicated Chinese characters still in use
today. There are the biang biang noodles from shanxi (Shaanxi, shǎn xī,陕西) province.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biang_biang_noodles



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yonglin -

Biang2 biang2 noodles are native to Shaanxi (陕西), not Shanxi (山西).

It should be noted that there is also a simplified version of the biang2 character in use, i.e.,
were 長 is replaced by 长, 馬 by 马, etc. I found this quite hilarious. I would have thought
乂 on top of 辶 would have been an appropriate simplification....... .










naturegirl -

yonglin wrote


Quote:

Biang2 biang2 noodles are native to Shaanxi (陕西), not Shanxi (山西).

Oh, I never noticed that you could also differ their pronunciation in pinyin...










muyongshi -

Well it's not pinyin...it's just the way it was romanized as a place name...










yonglin -



Quote:

Well it's not pinyin...it's just the way it was romanized as a place name...

Fair enough, but if you're omitting the tone and writing "Shanxi", I take for granted that you are
writing in English, rather than in pinyin. Either English or pinyin works for me.










muyongshi -



Quote:

Fair enough, but if you're omitting the tone and writing "Shanxi", I take for granted that you are
writing in English, rather than in pinyin. Either English or pinyin works for me.

I agree with you on that, especially when it comes to place names....












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Friday, December 5, 2008

Chinese Class - Learning Mandarin - how to get beyond survival chinese?? -








> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
Learning Mandarin - how to get beyond survival chinese??
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yong27 -

I'd be interested to know how many people out there learning Mandarin actually broke thru the
intermediate level to become fluent in it.

There seem to be a lot of people in China who have been studying for say 2 years, but can only
speak survival chinese (ie restaurants, taxis, buying things, conversations in broken chinese with
friends).

But to actually become fluent where you can talk about any topic without problems and read the
newspaper seems almost pretty bloody impossible! I don't think it's ever going to end!

What have other people in the same shoes done? Is my choice really only between getting a chinese
girlfriend/boyfriend or going home???



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muyongshi -

Well first of all you are missing an entire level in the process here which is being
conversational. This is the true intermediate level and survival Chinese is more what you
described but that is not an intermediate level. Maybe a low intermediate. There is no way to
really get what is intermediate, beginner, advanced through. Hey, maybe I'm wrong and it is
intermediate that is what you described and what I described is advanced and then you have fluency.

Not trying to argue terminology but from what you describe there is a whole other level that you
have to get to before you can really even begin to think of fluency.

I myself am trying to figure out the fluency question as it seems to be the hardest part....

Where I am at now is what I call a conversational level.... I can watch, listen or read almost
anything and understand 90% of what I am reading. Recognize around 3000+ characters (this is based
on the books I read/study from), can carry on a conversation with friends for hours on any
majority of topic but in many topics still lack the specific vocab. I have also "taught" classes
using Chinese and only Chinese. I probably speak clearly 85% of the time but takes me a good more
time to explain than a native speaker and I get grammar right probably around 90% of the time. I
am still not content and really have no clue where to go from here and maybe it's just a time
issue as 80% of my life is lived in Chinese....










Lu -

Muyongshi, I'm at about that level too... Sometimes I am fooled into believing I'm actually
seriously good at Chinese. But then I realize how far I got with English, and moreover how far
some Taiwanese I know got with English, and then I know I'm nowhere near really good.



Quote:

But to actually become fluent where you can talk about any topic without problems and read the
newspaper seems almost pretty bloody impossible!

It's not. It takes time and dedication, but it can be done. The trick is just to learn all those
words, and practice them, and learn them again after forgetting. And then one day, after years of
hard work, you pick up a newspaper and realize that you can read it. (And a bit later you realise
that most newspapers in Chinese are rubbish.)
Listening and talking a lot helps too, and this is where the Chinese GF comes in, but honestly a
good friend, or just generally someone you are happy to spend a lot of time with, works just as
well.



Quote:

I don't think it's ever going to end!

Well that's true.

Good luck!










yong27 -

Thanks for your comments. Maybe it is just a matter of time and bitter hard work. No magic tricks,
not short cuts. Dammit!

I probably know about 2,500+ characters, and can converse (although not well) on a variety of
topics. It's good to have some goal posts I guess, and be motivated by others in the same boat.
It's amazing how much you can pick up when you've just started learning, but it's the journey
between basic communications and understanding what's going on around you - to actually being
fluent (whatever that means) that is long!!

Seriously though this is one of the hardest things I've ever attempted. Good to know it can be
possible to get there.












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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Chinese Tutor - bu qingqu -








> Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing
bu qingqu
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rezaf -

someone wrote this sentence to me:顺便求教这句话的意思。 does he want me to explain
something to him or does he want to teach me something?



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rootfool -

顺便求教这句话的意思=btw,plz tell me the meaning of this sentence.










muyongshi -

And just a quick note it should be "qing chu"...










rezaf -

我不喜欢拼音。










colourpear -

“bu qingchu (不清楚)” basically means " I don't know",“I don't know about the
situation."
For example
Ao you know when Mike will come here ?(Mike几时过来呢?)
B:bu qingchu.(不清楚)










colourpear -

Yeah, the writer wanted you to explain something to him.












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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Chinese Character - Need ideas/suggestions for my Chinese name. -








> Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations
Need ideas/suggestions for my Chinese name.
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Aurora -

Hi!

I'm moving to China in a few months time and I will be studying Mandarin. I would love to have a
Chinese name, and the university strongly encourages us to have our names ready for registration
purposes. Therefor I'm in a bit of a dilemma. I don't want to come up with a name by myself (of
course) since I'm a pure novice when it comes to Chinese, and I wouldn't want to get an obscure
name that would con notate something totally different than intended and that I'm not capable to
understand yet.

I googled around the internet and found this wonderful resource that is this forum. And I'm
wondering if there is anyone out there that would be able to help me come up with any suggestions
for the given name in chinese? I would appreciate this immensely, and would love to receive any
ideas/suggestions!



Now; I'm guessing I should describe myself a bit in order to give some direction/suggestion
towards names. I'm a European girl in my early 20's. I was born in the autumn (september), on an
early morning (eventhough I'm a night-tme person nowadays). I would describe myself as a bright,
outgoing and sweet-natured person. I'm very fond of literature, especially classics, and culture.
I hold high standards in every aspect of life, especially morally.

I most highly value elegance and aesthetics (beauty) as well as intelligence and strive for a
harmonious balance between them. Others usually describe me as social, intelligent and
compassionate..

My European given names are very poetic and beautiful (in my opinion, of course) and at the same
time they are classic and "classy", and my mother put a lot of thought in to them which I've
cherished my entire life. I see these names as representative of myself, and this is why I would
like to have a chinese name that has meaning to it rather than a translation of the sounds of my
names..

My favorite flowers are lotuses, orchids and lily's.

My favorite color is a beautiful pale pink, like the color of white peonies that have a dash of
pink in them.




So, that was a bit about me. I hope there is some kind people in this forum that could take a few
minutes to give me suggestions, I would value this immensly and be very grateful!

Thank you in advance to any kind person willing to give me any suggestions!



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cdn_in_bj -

Does it matter to if your Chinese name sounds nothing like your European name? If so, then you can
focus on the meaning of characters. You could start by choosing a Chinese surname.

According to my dictionary, 斐 (fei3) and 郁 (yu4) are both Chinese surnames which also have the
meaning "elegant". 藇 (xu4) is also a surname and has the meaning of "beautiful".

If you decide to choose a different surname, there are several other characters meaning "elegant",
"beautiful" and for different types of flowers so you can still incorporate these meanings in your
Chinese name.

You should also have a look at this thread:

http://www. /showthread.php?t=17390

According to one poster in that thread you should be careful so that your name isn't "too
feminine" and end up sounding too much like a "working girl's name". I'm not sure how she'd know
about that (I certainly don't), but I guess it'd be along the same lines of "stripper names" in
the west.

I know this isnt much, but hopefully it'll give you some ideas.










Aurora -

cdn_in_bj:


Thank you so much for your help! I really appreciate it.

I would prefer for my Chinese name to not sound like my English name, I feel that there would be a
wider array of more suitable choices this way. This is also why I chose not to write out my given
English names. This screenname, Aurora, is actually "only" the name of the amazing dog I grew up
with. ;)



I like all the ideas of surnames that you posted, thank you for taking the time! 斐 (fei3) jumps
out at me, I like the feeling that I get from the sound, and the meaning of it is so nice, more
than I could've hoped for (and I sure wouldn't have found it among all different possible surnames
probably)!


I had no idea about how a too feminine name might be translated into a "working girl" name so this
was a great insight! I've been under the impression that Chinese names tend to not show a gender
specification as is the common case among English names, but hadn't reflected at all regarding how
a too feminine or masculine sounding name would be perceived. Very insightful!

Once again, thank you for this great start towards finding my chinese name!










Lu -

Fei might be a surname, but it seems to be a rare one, I've never seen it before. I think it might
be a better idea if you take it as a given name. You could take Yu as surname, incidentally,
that's the surname of a famous Chinese writer (Yu Dafu).

Chinese names are actually often quite gender-specific, in that boys get names like strong, brave,
honour, and girls names that mean beautiful, graceful, or precious stone.



Quote:

I was born in the autumn (september), on an early morning (eventhough I'm a night-tme person
nowadays)

Too bad 秋生 (qiu1sheng1, born in autumn) is already taken... (name of HK actor Antony Wong).
晨生 (chen2sheng1, born in the early morning) might work though.



Quote:

I most highly value elegance and aesthetics (beauty) as well as intelligence and strive for a
harmonious balance between them.

You could consider 美穎 (mei3ying3, beautiful and intelligent), but that is a bit trite. I don't
think it would be working girl-ish, but it's not very original either.

I'm not a native speaker though, best wait for what they say.










skylee -

I like the -生 (sheng) names. Qiu Sheng (秋生, born in Autumn), 港生 (gang3 sheng1, born in
Hong Kong, Jacky Chan's real name), 京生 (jing1 sheng1, born in Beijing, name of an activist),
安生 / 寧生 (An1 Sheng1 / Ning2 Sheng1, born quiet and peaceful, real names of twin sisters in
HK) are all very nice. And they are basically unisex.

I like 百合 (bai3 he2, lily) as a name.










yonglin -



Quote:

Fei might be a surname, but it seems to be a rare one, I've never seen it before.

My Chinese TA in Canada was surnamed 斐. I think it's a nice name.










reisen -

曦(xi), is nice, means twilight in the dawn, and also means hope, which sounds the same with
希.

昀”(yun),sounds the same with another word 云(clouds),means the sunshine with
power and vitality, in chinese means 喷薄而出的日光, can anyone give a better translation?

安(an), means, quiet, calm, safe. a very nice name.

晗(han), means , the sky will soon bright now.

my favourite words.










Li Yuzuo -

Hi dear, why not try 秋晨 (qiu1 chen2), I think it's a very beautiful girl's name.
sounds good, and accordant with the autumn-morning.










skylee -

秋晨 (qiu1 chen2) is good.












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Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Learning Chinese - Help! Pronunciation "coaching" with non-teacher. -








> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
Help! Pronunciation "coaching" with non-teacher.
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shibole -

My wife, who is a native Mandarin speaker but not a language teacher, is trying to help me to
learn better pronunciation. We are making some progress (I think I can finally pronounce ü now)
but the problem is that when I don't pronounce something properly she often seems to have no idea
how to give me advice on how to do it correctly.

I'm using the Integrated Chinese textbook and the descriptions of how to make each sound are
somewhat helpful but a bit too technical with all the phonetic jargon. I find the Wikipedia pinyin
article to be somewhat helpful, and I also find that using one of those flash applets that plays
sounds for all the possible sylables in pinyin to be helpful.

Still I wonder if there is anything my wife could read about how to teach English speakers how to
pronounce Mandarin sounds. Does anyone know any web pages on the subject? It's OK or maybe
preferable if the pages are in Chinese as that's her native language.

Also, is it important to pronounce everything exactly right from the beginning or is it OK to have
sucky pronunciation for a while and get better at it later?

Thanks



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sthubbar -

This is a good question. My opinion is that I'm a huge fan of the Pimsleur method. If a person
wants to pronounce a language well, I would highly discourage them from using written material to
start. The reason is that our eyes have been programmed for over 20 years to pronounce these
symbols in our native language sounds. Now we are being asked to associate new sounds to the same
symbols and I think the challenge is too hard.

I recommend what Pimsleur does. They give you a sound for your ears to hear and then you do your
best to replicate the sound. You also use your ears to judge wether the sound coming from your
mouth sounds similar to the first sound you heard. Only after achieve a basic conversational level
in a language should a person then try to associate written symbols to those sounds. [BTW, this is
the way all of us learned our mother tongue.]

As a final note, we all have accents. What is important to me is whether my accent is
understandable or not. Most of the time it is, other times it is not. It is only on the times that
I'm not understood that I worry about my pronunciation.

Just my opinion.










cdn_in_bj -

Is she coaching you just by telling you what sounds right or not, or is she also showing you how
those sounds are formed? For instance, where should your tongue be when saying "chi" vs "ci"? This
is so natural to her that she doesn't think about it, and might not realize that it could be the
root cause of your difficulties. We western speakers are just not used to forming some of these
sounds, and need to teach our tongues new tricks. It's the same reason why many native Chinese
speakers have trouble with the "r" sound in English. Anyways, I suggest you try this approach with
her, if you haven't already.



Quote:

Also, is it important to pronounce everything exactly right from the beginning or is it OK to have
sucky pronunciation for a while and get better at it later?

I don't think you can expect to have perfect pronounciation from the start. Improvement comes
naturally with practise. As long as your wife can understand what you're saying, I wouldn't worry
too much. And even when you reach the point where you may think that your pronounciation is
dead-on, there will probably still be some subtle differences (subtle to you that is) which in
fact make a big difference to a native speaker.










roddy -

No need to get everything perfect right at the start, but I do strongly recommend that you make
sure you are aware of what your problems are and keep working on fixing them. Otherwise they
become habits, and then you are in all sorts of trouble










Lugubert -

One East-West problem is that many native speakers of Chinese just can't understand the concept of
consonants vs. vowels, but keep thinking in syllables only. When I asked some Chinese to explain
which speakers distinguish between the a vowels in 盘 pán vs. their to me much more closed [æ]
than their extremely open [a] in 旁 páng, one didn't understand my question at all, and another
one told me that "pan and pang are different (words/syllables), you can't compare them." I have
had such a comment from a native speaker of Chinese who had even studied languages in Europe.










mirgcire -

Yes, there is at least one web site that discusses this issue: www.sinosplice.com. As you
mentioned, the hanyu pinyin wikipedia site also has good information on pronunciation. For
practice you might want to try www.pinyinpractice.com.

There are some very specific positions that your mouth needs to form in order to make proper
mandarin sounds. In fact, unless you pay attention to this, your mandarin will be confusing (at
best) to native speakers.

For example to make the ü sound, start by the ee sound (rhymes with bee), then protrude your
lips. The tonge position for ü is the same as ee, but the lip position is different. This is even
more fun when you say words spelled xue. The lips start protruded and get stretched back into a
smile.

BTW, most words with this sound do not have the two little dots. Only lü and nü have the dots,
but all words starting with yu, xu, qu, ju are also pronounced with the same vowel sound.

The most difficult sounds for the mandarin learner are zh, ch, sh, z, c, s, j, q, x and r. For zh,
ch, sh and r, the sound is made between the tip of the tongue and the roof of the mouth. For j, q,
and x, the sound is made between the aveolar ridge and the surface of the tongue. The aveolar
ridge are those little bumps right above the teeth. You can get feel for the difference is by
comparing the english words "shirt" and "sheet", but the tongue is farther back with the mandarin
sh, and more forward with the mandarin x.

I guess the point I am trying to illustrate is that mandarin speakers have no idea about this.
They learned at such an early age that it would not have been helpful anyway. It really takes a
lot of attention to understand the relationship between the shape of your mouth and the sound it
makes. This is what speech therapists get paid big bucks for. To better understand how difficult
it is try explaining to a mandarin speaker how to pronounce "usually".










shibole -

Thanks for all the advice so far!



Quote:

If a person wants to pronounce a language well, I would highly discourage them from using written
material to start.

This seems to go against the whole integrated language learning approach though, or am I wrong? I
am using an integrated textbook and think this is the way to go.



Quote:

As a final note, we all have accents. What is important to me is whether my accent is
understandable or not. Most of the time it is, other times it is not. It is only on the times that
I'm not understood that I worry about my pronunciation.

I still have some cases where I'm not understood. I have been trying to keep track of which sounds
I have trouble with, but that does require that I write them down in pinyin.



Quote:

Is she coaching you just by telling you what sounds right or not, or is she also showing you how
those sounds are formed? For instance, where should your tongue be when saying "chi" vs "ci"?

She's sort of trying to show me, and I'm also trying to read written descriptions in the textbook
on how sounds are formed, but it's kind of difficult for her to show me. A guess an x-ray machine
would come in handy here....



Quote:

make sure you are aware of what your problems are and keep working on fixing them. Otherwise they
become habits, and then you are in all sorts of trouble

That's what I'm worried about, basically.



Quote:

One East-West problem is that many native speakers of Chinese just can't understand the concept of
consonants vs. vowels, but keep thinking in syllables only.

Actually I've noticed this already. I'd say that it extends to tone as well. Sometimes I say
something wrong like "míng" but she can't tell if I'm getting the consonant, vowel, or tone
wrong. In some cases she first says it's the vowel, then says it's the tone. Also, with these
compound vowels it often sounds like more than one sylable to me, and then I end up trying to
speak it in a way that sounds like two sylables to her even if I'm sure I'm sluring the vowels
together.

Maybe I should try to practice pronunciation for a while without looking at any pinyin just to
make sure that isn't causing confusion, but I need to be able to read how to pronounce characters
that I look up in the dictionary....










roddy -

I would ignore advice to avoid written material (ie pinyin in this case). Yes, you do need to
learn to associate old letters with new sounds, but that's a very minor issue compared to getting
your ears to hear those new sounds and your tongue and associated paraphernalia to make them.
Obviously don't go around pronouncing x as ecks though. Learn the rules of pinyin pronunciation
and that's a tool that will stand you in good stead.

I also suspect that new learners who don't use pinyin are going to have issues distinguishing
sounds and get themselves in an almighty mess if they don't have a teacher sitting on top of them
every time they open their mouths. There's a stage where you can't distinguish new sounds, as we
tend to funnel them into the sounds we already know - that's when you need something written down
to show you that even if you can't hear it, they're different.

As for something practical for you and your wife to do - download Audacity or a similar tool and
spend some time recording yourself and your wife saying a few syllables and compare them. Model
yourself on your wife and see how close you can get, and if there's a problem you can break the
syllable down and see where the problem is.

Textbooks - the only one I can personally recommend is this one, which you'd probably need to
order from China. Plus points is that it goes through basic pronunciation step by step, then tone
patterns, then onto intonation, sentence stress, etc, and there are clear explanations of what
your tongue, etc, should be doing at each point. Minuses are that it's all in Chinese, so perhaps
more useful for your wife than yourself at the moment, and the tapes aren't great quality. It was
recommended two years ago on here by Carlo, and I haven't seen anything better yet - but that said
I haven't looked.

I think maybe hoping your wife will be able to tell you what you are doing wrong is a bit
ambitious. It's hard enough for an untrained native speaker to explain how to make the right
sounds. Being able to hear what is going wrong is a whole different level of expertise, and the
only people I've met able to do it even on a simple level have had proper linguistics training.
That said, if you can find someone who can do it it's fantastic - one teacher I'm working with at
the moment seems to have a better idea of what my tongue is up to than I do.










cdn_in_bj -



Quote:

Yes, there is at least one web site that discusses this issue: www.sinosplice.com

Was the guy who runs that site (John) on TV a week ago? I'm pretty sure I saw him doing some sort
of English/Chinese "rap" about "the Jing" (Beijing). It was so cheesy that I had to change the
channel. But I must admit that his spoken Mandarin is really good.










Lu -

Perhaps you could try and hire a teacher/tutor for a while, to set your pronounciation straight.
Like some other posters noted, it's really hard to explain how you pronounce your native language,
you just do it. TxFL teachers are trained to teach people their native language. Spouses are good
for practicing your language, but not necessarity good teachers.

Good luck!












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