After putting together toys for my two daughters last night, I think we're safe from any threat, unless they send us the mis-manufactured pieces and a single sheet of directions in ridiculous "English" for us to put 'em together, ourselves.
Merry Christmas, everyone!
OT - I'm no longer worried about Asian nukes.
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- Ysabel Kid
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Toys are finally put together. Let's go out for a Chinese dinner.
http://www.engrish.com/category_index.p ... =CHINGLISH
Bruce
http://www.engrish.com/category_index.p ... =CHINGLISH
Bruce
The Chinese language, written and spoken, is a very fascinating thing.
It is also one of the hardest to translate, along with English. For example,the Chinese words for 'mother' and 'horse', when written with the English Alphabet are spelled the same; Ma. The Chinese Characters, on the other hand , are entirely different and so is pronounciation. So you could see how things would get confused...
Still, there are more English speaking Chinese, than English speaking Americans.
It is also one of the hardest to translate, along with English. For example,the Chinese words for 'mother' and 'horse', when written with the English Alphabet are spelled the same; Ma. The Chinese Characters, on the other hand , are entirely different and so is pronounciation. So you could see how things would get confused...
Still, there are more English speaking Chinese, than English speaking Americans.
And the gap is widening...cutter wrote:The Chinese language, written and spoken, is a very fascinating thing.
It is also one of the hardest to translate, along with English. For example,the Chinese words for 'mother' and 'horse', when written with the English Alphabet are spelled the same; Ma. The Chinese Characters, on the other hand , are entirely different and so is pronounciation. So you could see how things would get confused...
Still, there are more English speaking Chinese, than English speaking Americans.
bogie
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You are being too kind to some folks who are out to make a quick buck, but who are too cheap to hire a decent translator. Vietnamese and Chinese words are similar ("ma," with a certain tone, means ghost in Vietnamese, as well). The obstacle of the tones has long been conquered by adding a letter at the end of a word, as in telegraphic Vietnamese or Chinese, that picks up the tone that makes the different word.cutter wrote:The Chinese language, written and spoken, is a very fascinating thing.
It is also one of the hardest to translate, along with English. For example,the Chinese words for 'mother' and 'horse', when written with the English Alphabet are spelled the same; Ma. The Chinese Characters, on the other hand , are entirely different and so is pronounciation. So you could see how things would get confused...
Still, there are more English speaking Chinese, than English speaking Americans.
E.g. - I don't remember all the translations, but the word for "ban" in the six tones used by the Vietnamese (no inflection, rising, falling, falling and rising, broken rising, and glottal stop - the abrupt low tone) are written thusly: ban, bans, banf, banr, banx, banj. Combined with the word for "me", they mean "I am busy," "Sell me," "Shoot me," "My friend," and two other things I don't remember.
Nope - it's not the language, it's just like here in the U.S. - people are becoming too lazy and/or ignorant to take time to use the proper English, spelling, and so on, as we get yet more technologically dependent and internationally dependent on products!
Whoops - almost stumbled over my soapbox...
Last edited by JohndeFresno on Thu Dec 27, 2007 5:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.