Wednesday, June 11, 2008

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 5th February 2008, 04:50 PM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

All fixed.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:25 PM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

Email functionality will be on and off while we're trying to track down the problem here. Got me
absolutely stumped.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:59 AM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

Ok, I think I know what's going on, at least to a certain extent. The forums were set up to use my
SMTP account. As I posted a while ago, I haven't been able to use it recently, but I was putting...

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:57 AM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

And once more for luck . . .

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:47 AM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

test again

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:36 AM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

Wait, I won't get an alert for my own post. Someone else reply please . . .

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 4th February 2008, 10:36 AM

Replies: 13

Not receiving email alerts?

Views: 509

Posted By roddy

Re: Not receiving email alerts?

/tests

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HSK - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 25th March 2008, 03:47 PM

Replies: 7

A Song: "imagine"

Views: 229

Posted By gougou

回复: A Song: "imagine"

With respect to this peaceful song, you shall be forgiven. Sorry, studentyoung, to be pulling your
thread off-topic!

I like this song a lot. It was one of the first that I learned on the piano,...

Forum: Other cultures and language 25th March 2008, 03:29 PM

Replies: 7

A Song: "imagine"

Views: 229

Posted By gougou

回复: A Song: "imagine"

It's by John Lennon. You must have heard it before?

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

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

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Forum: Other cultures and language 20th May 2008, 03:22 PM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By Hofmann

Re: What other languages do we speak

Cantonese is my mother tongue.
I learned English because I was raised in the U.S., going to school, talking to people, etc.
I learned Mandarin from talking to people and studying by myself.
I learned...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 28th August 2007, 04:29 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By CheukMo

Re: What other languages do we speak

So true in my case. I could have been natively fluent in Spanish a long time ago if I had studied
more. I could probably be close in Cantonese as well if I had kept studying all those times that
I...

Forum: Other cultures and language 28th August 2007, 04:24 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By CheukMo

Re: What other languages do we speak

English - native language

Spanish- almost natively fluent

Some (小小) Cantonese

卓武

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Chinese Studies - First Episode 13: 暗算 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Films and Television > Chinese TV Shows - The First Episode

Project
First Episode 13: 暗算
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renzhe -

Being a part of the Grand First Episode Project.

Emule, Youku

The story of a secret unit trying to decode transmissions by nationalist agents in the early 1950s.

It's set in the 50s, in a war setting, it's dark and gloomy (as the title suggest) and secretive
and full of intrigue (as the synopsis suggests). It's been over a year since I've seen this (I'll
give it another look) and I remember that it was slow-moving, but interesting if you're into the
war/spy genre. The production and acting are quite good.

The language was intermediate to upper intermediate (lots of military vocabulary).

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roddy -

I watched a fair chunk of this a while back - the first act, when they're trying to crack
transmissions between leftover nationalist soldiers and Taiwan is fairly good and can be quite
tense. It suffers a little bit in that its all set at the base and feels very removed from the
action - although they do come under attack on at least one occasion. The second act I found
painfully weak as they basically abandon the eavesdropping and codebreaking and turn it into a
love story, and not a very good one at that. Apparently the third act, about the communist
underground in 30s Shanghai, is the best - but I'd given up by that point.

monto -

Aha, different people like different thing.
We have a lot of choice.

monto -

Aha, different people like different thing.
We have a lot of choices.

muyongshi -

Watched this last night and it was interesting enough that I am going to watch a few more. Too bad
about the unfortunate turns it makes that made Roddy stop watching, we'll see if I do the same.

The language wasn't all that difficult in my opinion but it moved fast and you have to get used to
what they were talking about before things really could just be "listened" to (ie I found myself
using subtitles a lot just to keep up). But this should be fine but the second or third episode.

renzhe -

I think that it would be a good idea to try and watch the third act immediately. Many people say
that this is by far the best part. I get the idea that it was the third act that made this show so
famous, not the parts before it.

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Learn Chinese online - 2 questions in a business article - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Extras > Other cultures and language

2 questions in a business article
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Myself -

Hi,

While reading a bussiness article, I don't quite understand these two. Could you please help
paraphrase them? If you can explain in Chinese, that would be better. But if not, can you explain
in simple English? Thank you.

1. Ideally, it would be desirable to investigate adaptation directly. Unfortunately, in a
cross-sectional study such as this, adaptiveness is hard to measure because of its normative
overtones. Almost all executives claim that they are adaptive---that they scan their environments
for problems and opportunities and adjust their strategies accordingly.
(question: what is normative overtones in this context?)

2. Uncertain environments were shown by Miller (198 to warrant the expenses of, and to benefit the
most from, product innovation and aggressive marketing differentiation.

(question: Which is benefited? uncertain environments or product innovation?)

(from Danny Miller's Stale in the Saddle: CEO Tenure and The Match Between Organization and
Environment)

Thanks in advance!!

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yonglin -

I'll have a go.

Quote:

1. Ideally, it would be desirable to investigate adaptation directly. Unfortunately, in a
cross-sectional study such as this, adaptiveness is hard to measure because of its normative
overtones. Almost all executives claim that they are adaptive---that they scan their environments
for problems and opportunities and adjust their strategies accordingly.
(question: what is normative overtones in this context?)

If you are doing a cross-sectional study (横断面研究) you are probably investigating some
issue (for instance, whether executives are adaptive) by sending out a survey (usually, a long
booklet with multiple-choice type questions) to a large number of people. As I understand it, they
were sending this type of survey to a number of business executives, asking questions like "Do you
consider yourself adaptive in your work?". You can compare this with a case study (个案研究),
in which the researcher might very carefully observe a small number of executives in their work to
decide whether they are adaptive or not.

If you would be observing the behaviour of the executives, then you can objectively answer the
question whether they are adaptive or not. That is, it's a matter of fact. However, in this case,
you were just asking the executives whether they believe themselves to be adaptive or not - so you
are investigating the question whether the executives think they are adaptive or not, not whether
in fact they are adaptive or not.

In this case, "normative" means something related to opinion rather than to objective facts.
Something related to facts would be called "positive". For instance, "most leaves and green" is a
positive statement (just a fact about the world), whilst "green leaves are beautiful" (an opinion
of something) is a normative statement. This distinction is often used in the social sciences. For
instance, we distinguish between positive and normative economics. A positive economic statement
would be something like "when prices of apples fall, people buy more apples" (just a fact about
the world), whilst "governments ought to provide unemployment insurance" would be a normative
statement (expressing an opinion).

Quote:

2. Uncertain environments were shown by Miller (1988 ) to warrant the expenses of, and to benefit
the most from, product innovation and aggressive marketing differentiation.

In strict grammatical sense, it is the uncertain environments benefiting. You can separate this
sentence into two parts:

1. "Miller showed that uncertain environment warrant (=justify) the expenses of product innovation
and aggressive marketing differentiation. "

Surely, innovation and aggressive marketing is expensive, but if the environment is uncertain,
such costs are justified (That is: If the economic environment is uncertain, it is more profitable
for the company to invest in marketing and innovation than not to.)

2. "He also showed that uncertain environments benefit the most from product innovation and
marketing differentiation."

The benefits of innovation and and aggressive marketing are larger the greater the uncertainty in
the market.

Myself -

Thank you so much, younglin!!! I think I've got the picture after your detailed explanation. Thank
you!!!

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Chinese Class - 石质为主 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

石质为主
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aboooot -

Dear friend,
do you know what does 石质为主 mean?
I've found it in this sentence:
石质为主的坡地景观由国家体育场用地的四周边缘微微升起,平缓而不易被�
��察觉,形成了巨大的完型雕塑般的“鸟巢”的天然基座。

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monto -

石质为主
stone texture as the main or mainly stone texture

aboooot -

so the translation should be something like this, right?

An hilly landscape mainly made of stones smoothly and imperceptiblement rises up from the four
sides of the National Stadium and formes the natural base of the huge and sculptural "Bird's Nest".

yuanetking -

用石头做的...

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Learn Mandarin online - Sequential Number Phrases - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

Sequential Number Phrases
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pijiu -

I have an exam coming up in a few weeks and my teachers have always really focused on writing
characters and speaking/listening. I've taken it into my own hands to learn more about the grammar
as I often find myself sometimes getting confused. I was surprised at how much of the basic stuff
I didn't actually know.

I came across this sequential number phrase:

他说得一清二楚。
He said it perfectly clear.

Can this be also used in understanding things.. like..
他懂得一清二楚。

Or would there be another/better way of saying he understood perfectly?
Sorry for the elementary question!

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L-F-J -

yes, you're correct. you can say that.

一清二楚 is a set phrase which works as an adverb or adjective.

tooironic -

一清二楚 is a chengyu too.

Some context:
老舍《四世同堂》:“小顺儿样样事情都要闹个一清二楚,不然怎么能当好�
��妈的保镖呢。” (http://www.chinese-tools.com/chinese...ail/28678.html)

semantic nuance -

A similar phrase: 一乾二淨.

Example:

A: 我交代你的事, 你可給我忘得一乾二淨的!

B: 沒! 沒! 沒!. 我怎麼可能忘得一乾二淨呢? 我可是記得一清二楚的.
只是還沒時間去辦.

skylee -

Another simliar phrase : 一窮二白

A: 我交代你的事, 你可給我忘得一乾二淨的!

B: 沒! 沒! 沒!. 我怎麼可能忘得一乾二淨呢? 我可是記得一清二楚的.
只是我現在一窮二白,真的辦不到.

semantic nuance -

another phrase in the pattern of 一...二..: 一石二鳥

A: 我交代你的事, 你可給我忘得一乾二淨的!

B: 沒! 沒! 沒!. 我怎麼可能忘得一乾二淨呢? 我可是記得一清二楚的.
只是我現在一窮二白,真的辦不到.
我一直在想著有沒有什麼一石二鳥的好計策. 您的事我怎麼敢忘呢?

monto -

一清二楚,接二连三,朝三暮四,四分五裂,五颜六色,七上八下,八九不�
��十。

trien27 -

一而十,十而百,百而千, 千而万。: Simplified Chinese
一而十,十而百,百而千,千而萬。 : Traditional Chinese.
Source: From San Zi Jing, 三字经,or The 3 character classic.

独一无二
一窮二白
一干二净
一清二白
一清二楚
一箭双雕
一石二鸟
一心两用
举一反三
一而再,再而三
一人之下,万人之上
接二连三
三心二意
三言两语
三更穷,五更富
张三李四
三番四次
朝三暮四
四分五裂
四书五经
五颜六色
五脏六腑
五花八门
乱七八糟
七上八下
八九,不离十
九死一生
用尽九牛二虎之力
十拿九稳
十万火急
五十步笑一百步
百世艘来共传道,千世艘来共沉湎
千家万户
千刀万剐
千变万化
千言万语
千万不可
千秋万代
千千万万
万千宠爱在一身
万紫千红
万万不能
不怕一万,最怕万一
万无一失
That's all I can come up with for now.

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese School - Coffee Culture in China - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Society

Coffee Culture in China
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ProbableCause -

Hi, I'm doing a project for a class on the rise of a "coffee culture" in China, and would like to
gather some information.

I have seen this thread: http://www. From Beijing Chinese School/showthread.php?t=20789
and I find wushijiao's comment very interesting: "People, especially in China, are starting to
associate Starbucks with Westernized "love" "romance"...etc."

I'd like to know more along these lines. Often Western, especially European, cafes (maybe not
Starbucks so much) are places to relax, shoot the breeze, read a book, etc.. I get the impression
that the few coffee shops in China are, similar to KFC and McDonald's status, reserved for special
dates and business meetings. Is that correct? Is this an example of fetishization of Western
culture, or a more independent Chinese phenomenon?

How many coffee shops are there? Who goes to them: everyone, middle-class, elite, or just Western
tourists? What is the atmosphere? Do people go just to symbolize their status? How does this
compare/contrast with modern and past tea culture in China?

I'd be very interested in hearing anything you have to say about this. Thank you very much.

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cdn_in_bj -

Quote:

I'd like to know more along these lines. Often Western, especially European, cafes (maybe not
Starbucks so much) are places to relax, shoot the breeze, read a book, etc.. I get the impression
that the few coffee shops in China are, similar to KFC and McDonald's status, reserved for special
dates and business meetings. Is that correct? Is this an example of fetishization of Western
culture, or a more independent Chinese phenomenon?

Yes, I would agree that Western fetishization has played a big role in Starbucks' success here.

Quote:

How many coffee shops are there? Who goes to them: everyone, middle-class, elite, or just Western
tourists?

I would say it's mostly young professional types and western tourists, though the demographic
makeup probably changes depending on the location. In any case, 25Y for a coffee is a bit pricey
for most middle-class people to justify having on a regular basis although some will treat
themselves to it once in a while.

Quote:

What is the atmosphere? Do people go just to symbolize their status?

The atmosphere is similar to the ones back home, except there seems to be less lounging around.
This could be because the Starbucks here are smaller, and also because the business types are more
in a rush.

There are however a few local coffee chains that are more "lounging-friendly" - others here can
probably share their experiences.

Regarding the status thing, there may be some truth to that but if it's true then that's pretty
laughable IMHO.

Quote:

How does this compare/contrast with modern and past tea culture in China?

This is an interesting question. I can't think of any analogies to traditional "tea culture"
though.

I personally prefer the fresh-ground coffee at Ikea (another good example of Western
fetishization). It's really cheap and even free if you have an Ikea Family membership.

You should do a study on Haagen-Dazs ice cream in China - you'll get more insight into the dating
aspects.

renzhe -

One should probably differentiate between cities with a colonial past (like Hong Kong or
Shanghai), which have an actual coffee tradition, from the rest of China.

Beijing, Xi'an and similar tourist/expat magnets are probably a separate category.

msittig -

I think *Starbucks* would like Chinese to associate its stores with romance, but that is not the
case in reality. A couple months ago Starbucks sponsored a romantic comedy of sorts to run on the
LCDs in the Shanghai metro. It was really bad.

I would support the answers given above.

onebir -

Yunnan actually produces coffee, so you'd think there might be an indigenous coffee culture. But
I've seen no evidence of this in Kunming - maybe it exists in the coffee producing areas (further
south?)

simonlaing -

I think that in several places there was and still is mostly tea house culture.
Where people go for date or to hang out and play cards with friends. THey will play 80 points or
fight the land lord until late at night usually ordering refillable tea pots of tea and lots of
snacks like sunflower seeds and peanuts.

Most of these places also serve food and can double as restaurants but it is more as a place to
hang out play cards and talk.
This kind of stuff happens in laid back bars in the west but Bars in china are for the most part
more limited and like to pump the music loud.

In suzhou, I used to go to Tea shops a lot with friends, and met people and english corner nights
at tea shops. It was a good time. One of my friends said tea shops were a relatively recent
occurence as they were shut down in the 70s before which they sometimes had prostitution as a
secondary business in them.

Some thoughts,
have fun,
SimoN

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Learn Mandarin online - "乘物以游心"--zhuang zi - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Art and Literature

"乘物以游心"--zhuang zi
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sinologist -

recently i'm learning on a chinese ancient philosopher"zhuang zi".
my teacher assigned me a homework to translate what does"乘物以游心"mean.

as i can see,"乘" means to take something's usage, 游 is to be free.

but i'm not sure how to translate this into english, i wish to know there could be better ideas.
thank you!

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studentyoung -

Quote:

recently i'm learning on a chinese ancient philosopher"zhuang zi".
my teacher assigned me a homework to translate what does"乘物以游心"mean.

as i can see,"乘" means to take something's usage, 游 is to be free.

I don'’t think 乘 here means to take something’s usage, especially it is from Zhuangzi.

I think 乘here means “over”or “beyond”, and 物 means everything outside your body.
乘物 means “beyond the outside world”.

乘物以游心: Keep your consciousness beyond the outside world (don’t be confined by the
outside world) to free your mind. (Just for your reference.)

Cheers!

Sam Addington -

I have not been able to refer to a dictionary of the origin of word meanings, but it would seem to
me that the meaning of "ride" as in riding a horse would go back rather far into the past. Would
it be possible to go with this meaning? I like it!

In other words, start with a blade of grass, or with an insect, or a stone on the road, or
anything and let you mind run wild! Go places with your imagination you have never been.

Basically we are saying the same thing, but perhaps I am taking a simpler, more literal approach?

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Chinese language - Sooooo Slooooooow - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Announcements > Bug Reports / Help

Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Siege Warfare: Mechnical Artillery & Siege Weapons of Antiquity - Page 3 -

From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Chinese History
Chinese Siege Warfare: Mechnical Artillery & Siege Weapons of Antiquity
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Liang Jieming -

Another heads-up. Filming hasn't begun just yet but another episode of "Ancient Discoveries" on
Chinese Warfare is due 2008 on the History Channel, where they fire a reconstructed full scale
Xuanfeng Pao, explode a reconstructed Ming-era seamine as well as feature reconstructed landmines.
They haven't decided yet on whether to recreate an actual replica of MaJun's rotational pao or to
just render it in CGI yet but this episode shouldn't be missed.

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shibole -

Awesome work!

Personally I want to see someone reconstruct a "Huolung Chushui." Now THAT would be interesting.

Liang Jieming -

I asked. They built Ming era handheld rocket launchers for this round of filming but won't be
building the Huolongchushui because they already featured that in CGI in the earlier programme.

shibole -

Quote:

but won't be building the Huolongchushui because they already featured that in CGI in the earlier
programme

Lame! The thing about the Huolongchushui is that it seems a little far-fetched to me. I'm not
convinced that something like that would be able to skim over the water unless maybe it was
touching the water or something. It seems like they'd have had to invent the airplane, or a
guidance/stability system as advanced as modern rockets to have a wingless rocket that could skim
in any manner.

Originally I thought a "li" was more like a mile because it keeps getting mistranslated as such.
Now I find that it's actually more like 1/3rd of a mile. (Another one for the mistranslation
thread!) Still, being able to fly 3 li, an entire mile, in a direct shot rather than an arc also
seems a bit far-fetched to me for something that size (1.5m) considering the lack of modern
propellants and the submunitions it would be carrying.

Any thoughts on this? I admit that I'm not a Rocket Scientist.

Liang Jieming -

Review of the previous episode by Wong Koi Hin.

The Huolongchushui is featured in this episode.

http://citizenhistorian.com/2007/11/...inese-warfare/

shibole -

Thanks. Guess I'm going to have to buy the DVD.

Liang Jieming -

It's confirmed. Another episode of the Ancient Discoveries Series on Chinese Warfare will feature
yet another sketch from my book. It's airing in the US starting this week.

"Ancient Discoveries - Ancient Chinese Super Ships" lol.

The synopsis:
"The master shipbuilders of the Far East created the most deadly warships of ancient times in
their quest for supremacy of the seas. Uncover the extraordinary ingenuity of the ancient
engineers whose innovations would take shipbuilding to new heights and create some of the largest
and most fearsome navies of the ancient world."

Chinese Siege Warfare: Mechanical Artillery & Siege Weapons of Antiquity - An Illustrated
History

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Learn mandarin - 汉字 identification - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

汉字 identification
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SeekerOfPeace -

Would someone please tell me the pinyin for the following 汉字?

Thank you:

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muyongshi -

Pretty sure the last two are 统 and 搜 (tong and sou) but the first isn't clear enough but I
think it is similar to 孽 nie

Rhubarb -

Quote:

Would someone please tell me the pinyin for the following 汉字?

尊 zun

统 tong

搜 sou

SeekerOfPeace -

Thank you!

I was trying to play Fire Emblem in Chinese, it helped me understand some of the text.

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Chinese Online Class - 盗版碟 grammer question - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

盗版碟 grammer question
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Ari 桑 -

你一定在街上能买到一个全版的盗版碟。 Is 全版 the right way to say "complete
version?" This being verses a "cut version." I'm talking about Lust - Caution. And aside from
that, is this grammar right? And also, what is the best way to say "cut version?"

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文言訓開班 -

盗版? pirated? is that the actual word?

anyway, i think it's 全版盗版碟. i'd bet there's a better way to say this, though.

studentyoung -

Quote:

你一定在街上能买到一个全版的盗版碟。

In our daily life, we say,
“你在街上一定能买到一个完整版的《色,戒》盗版碟”.

Quote:

Is 全版 the right way to say "complete version?"

I think it is no problem, but we usually say “足版”, or “完整版” in our daily life.

Quote:

And also, what is the best way to say "cut version?"

You can try “删减版”or "删节版".

Cheers!

skylee -

Quote:

I think it is no problem, but we usually say “足版”, or “完整版” in our daily life.

I agree.

skylee -

But can you really buy a pirated copy of the full version of the film on the street?

studentyoung -

Quote:

But can you really buy a pirated copy of the full version of the film on the street?

I see it’s impossible in Hong Kong, but, you see, the world is so big and (Hmm…………). You
got it, right?

Cheers!

imron -

Quote:

But can you really buy a pirated copy of the full version of the film on the street?

Sure, why not? It's not like we can see the full version anywhere else.

heifeng -

i remember once long ago i bought 'my sassy girl' from a store and never even knew it was the
edited version, until i watched my friend's version (bought off the back of a bicycle) and
realized i was missing a good 15-20 minutes....so yeah you can

Ari 桑 -

Thanks everyone. Oh, and I would think in beijing it should not be hard to find the full version
on the street.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Chinese School - What should I read? - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

What should I read?
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rootfool -

Quote:

bought one of the large 《中国通史》books with lots of pictures, but found it read more like
a storybook of chronologically-ordered famous events and people than an actual history book.

who is the author of the book?
there're many versions of 《中国通史》。the version which written by 范文瀾 or 白壽彝
are better than others.

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gato -

Read 王小波's《黄金时代》 first. I think you'll like it, and it is pretty easy to read
compared to the others.

rootfool -

I also like his novel.Some people who likes him very much called themselves 王小波门下走狗.
And one of them said:"After you read wang xiao bo's novel,you 'll have two possiblity:one is
starting to write a novel at once.another is didn't write novel any more.

gougou -

Quote:

中华散文精粹

I bought that one at Wangfujing yesterday (as the only installment of the 知道一点。。。
series they had was the one not about China). Got through the first three or four today, and I'm
loving it. I always thought 散文 was some kind of dull essay, but it turns out they're pretty
much like short stories. Just what I need for my daily commute - thanks, gato!

roddy -

Quote:

Originally Posted by gato

Read 王小波's《黄金时代》 first. I think you'll like it, and it is pretty easy to read
compared to the others.

Nice thing about Wang Xiaobo for learners is that he's generally easy to read, is actually funny,
and perhaps most importantly, he wrote lots of short stuff. Picked up one volume of the complete
works today (have no idea how many different editions of his stuff there are, I must have paid for
some of his stuff seven times over by now) and am enjoying the short story 绿毛水怪。I
haven't finished it yet, but so far nobody's died or been beaten to a pulp, so that's one up on
余华。

Incidentally if anyone has bits and pieces of Wang Xiaobo lying around they're not reading, check
to see if you have the short story 猫 anywhere, and if you do sit down and read it.

gato -

Quote:

中华散文精粹
Got through the first three or four today, and I'm loving it.

In that case, I should go buy a copy myself. Haha. You should 胡适's essay "我的母亲". I
read it some time ago and found it really touching.

I've been browsing through my neighborhood bookstores looking for the perfect essay compilation
lately. But perfection is not easy, and I haven't actually bought one, yet. Maybe I'll get the one
you are reading. I do already a collection edited by 贾平凹 called
影响了我的三十二篇美文, which is not too bad. But some of the essays in it are pretty
dopey.

By the way, 冯骥才 who edited your 中华散文精粹 is both a writer and a painter.
Here is his profile:
http://baike.baidu.com/view/33882.htm
And his blog showing some of his paintings:
http://blog.sina.com.cn/fengjicai
冯骥才的博客

Pravit -

BTW, if anyone does buy the Peking University 中国古代简史, make sure you get the version
with maps (I believe it has a greenish cover?). I was quite irritated after noticing this version
existed, since mine is mapless.

gougou -

Quote:

I always thought 散文 was some kind of dull essay,

Turns out I was not completely wrong about that. I've skipped a few by now that discussed four
characters from Zhuangzi, or described a certain painter... Still like the others, though, mainly
for being easily understandable, and giving me an impression of how some famous writers like
老舍 or 巴金 write.

gato -

Quote:

if anyone does buy the Peking University 中国古代简史, make sure you get the version with
maps (I believe it has a greenish cover?). I was quite irritated after noticing this version
existed, since mine is mapless.

I think you mean 《简明中国古代史》by 张传玺 published by Beijing University Press. I
bought a copy today. I was amused by the preface in which the author said that one of the special
things about the book is that it's based on historical materialist perspective. Nevertheless, I
bought a copy because the format looked good. I like the pictures and maps (haha), and each
chapter is fairly short (7-10 pages) and appeared to be an easy read. If you are looking for a
basic outline of Chinese history written in Chinese, I think this is a good book to get.

If anyone is interested, I also bought these books:
往事何堪哀 by 王彬彬, stories of the Party's treatment of intellectuals in its early days;
经典常谈 by 朱自清, introduction to Chinese classics (such as the Confucius's Analects) by
朱自清, one of the most famous of pre-1949 essayists;
品读经典 edited 腾浩, a collection of famous essays from the 1920s to present day.

muyongshi -

For some online reading resources look here.

Has classics, moderns, children's junk and all in all a good FREE resource...

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Learn Chinese - listen to my accent! - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

listen to my accent!
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igotyofire -

do u really speak that fast? or was that just because you were reading, hmmz im going to need to
post up a vid of myself on youtube speakin chinese as well,hehe. altho i dont think my level is
anything to brag about, id like to post a video of me speaking but some here might find it
offensive hehe

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HashiriKata -

Quote:

id like to post a video of me speaking but some here might find it offensive hehe

Why? Because every other word you use is a swear word?

igotyofire -

no just because im saying the stereotypes of my race of people is true hehe im African American.

大汉之子民 -

Your pronunciation is very good, and a Chinese could understand easily.
The second sounds like a Southern accent.

Hero Doug -

I listened to them all, but I can't give any feedback since too much of it went over my head; I
only got bit's and pieces of it.

It did sound good though, I wouldn't have been able to pick you out as a foreigner if I didn't
know any better.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

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

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 24th July 2007, 01:23 PM

Replies: 34

From Beijing Chinese School Wiki?

Hey Roddy et. al,

Sorry, I've been busy latelyI can help work on the living in China section. Should I PM or email
it to Gato.
Some subtopics could be :
Accomodation
Teaching Jobs- issues and...

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 29th June 2007, 02:26 PM

Replies: 34

From Beijing Chinese School Wiki?

I agree with Gato that we should start it and as it gets popular people will join.

Starting it about Nanjing and Beijing would cool. We could put some travel stuff in as well .
I also agree and...

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 29th June 2007, 10:47 AM

Replies: 34

From Beijing Chinese School Wiki?

I would contribute to the wiki, My translator job doesn't let me check my email only Chinese
forums.
Plus I have first hand info on Nanjing an Jiangsu,
There was a chinese guy who wanted to do some...

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Forum: Forums Information 19th March 2005, 10:40 PM

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Feeds, Philosophy, Sci+Tech and Chinese Medicine gone

Views: 2,130

Posted By roddy

Feeds, Philosophy, Sci+Tech and Chinese Medicine gone

I've removed the Feeds feature which aggregated stories from a range of China related sites, as it
was getting very little use. If you were one of the few using it, I recommend
WatchingChina.com's...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 25th March 2008, 03:47 PM

Replies: 7

A Song: "imagine"

Views: 229

Posted By gougou

回复: A Song: "imagine"

With respect to this peaceful song, you shall be forgiven. Sorry, studentyoung, to be pulling your
thread off-topic!

I like this song a lot. It was one of the first that I learned on the piano,...

Forum: Other cultures and language 25th March 2008, 03:29 PM

Replies: 7

A Song: "imagine"

Views: 229

Posted By gougou

回复: A Song: "imagine"

It's by John Lennon. You must have heard it before?

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Forum: Other cultures and language 20th May 2008, 03:22 PM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By Hofmann

Re: What other languages do we speak

Cantonese is my mother tongue.
I learned English because I was raised in the U.S., going to school, talking to people, etc.
I learned Mandarin from talking to people and studying by myself.
I learned...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 28th August 2007, 04:29 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By CheukMo

Re: What other languages do we speak

So true in my case. I could have been natively fluent in Spanish a long time ago if I had studied
more. I could probably be close in Cantonese as well if I had kept studying all those times that
I...

Forum: Other cultures and language 28th August 2007, 04:24 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By CheukMo

Re: What other languages do we speak

English - native language

Spanish- almost natively fluent

Some (小小) Cantonese

卓武

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