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Learning : Greetings - Public Speaking
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Chinese Mandarin :
Registered on : 2007-11-04
Language : None
Posts : 1
Responses : 0
Comments : 8
2007-11-10 / 12:06AM
Everything was going great until you said that “guang lin” was a formal/polite way of saying “coming”.
How formal? Would our co-workers/classmates laugh at us if we used it with them?
PS Benny, ni de fa yin fei chang qing chu!!
Chinese Mandarin :
Registered on : 2007-07-25
Language : None
Posts : 0
Responses : 2
Comments : 128
2007-11-10 / 10:22AM
Ni hao Pasko!
It would be a bit weird when you say “guang lin” to your co-workers or classmates, :)
Chinese Mandarin :
Registered on : 2009-10-12
Language : None
Posts : 0
Responses : 0
Comments : 1
2009-10-12 / 11:40AM
oh my gosh this is so complicated cause im very fluent in english and hmong. now learning a third language is harder. but i’ll get it.. i love chines. by the way is chinese, taiwanese and madarin the same? reply back please..
Chinese Mandarin :
Registered on : 2007-01-01
Language : English, Mandarin Chinese
Posts : 0
Responses : 2359
Comments : 75
2009-10-12 / 05:03PM
Hi,
Mandarin is mainly for the oral version. And Chinese includes writing reading and listening and speaking. While Taiwanese is almost same as Chinese, just with some different local sayings and traditional characters. In China, we only have simplified except for HongKong.
Benny
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