Edison Chen
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Thanks for sharing, Mandarin is Taiwan's official language, but we mainland Chinese have different accent, they are too soft, and too women. We in mainland make fun of their(Taiwan) accent.
There is always some reason. Some Taiwanese in the US separate themselves with us mainland Chinese, they thought they are better than us, they have democracy, they don't want to be grouped together with us, especially the younger ones, the elders have more feeling to mainland China. Even the Taiwanese guys in the TV show says "Chinese can't even afford tea boiled eggs" "Chinese can't afford dumplings" I've met a Taiwan girl in the US before, she feels very uncomfortable when Americans "mistakenly" thought I and her are both Chinese, and she intermediately made a clarification that she is not. LOL.
Thanks for sharing, Mandarin is Taiwan's official language, but we mainland Chinese have different accent, they are too soft, and too women. We in mainland make fun of their(Taiwan) accent.
There is always some reason. Some Taiwanese in the US separate themselves with us mainland Chinese, they thought they are better than us, they have democracy, they don't want to be grouped together with us, especially the younger ones, the elders have more feeling to mainland China. Even the Taiwanese guys in the TV show says "Chinese can't even afford tea boiled eggs" "Chinese can't afford dumplings" I've met a Taiwan girl in the US before, she feels very uncomfortable when Americans "mistakenly" thought I and her are both Chinese, and she intermediately made a clarification that she is not. LOL.
I do think TW's mandarin is more crisp compared to for example Beijing Mandarin. Guangzhou's mandarin also sounds different in comparison with the Northerners.
some Taiwanese feel embarrassed to be addressed as Mainland Chinese.
Saw this magazine in Taiwan.
..................................................
I like the Beijing Mandarin accent the most, with the rolling "r" sound.
Though it's harder for us to speak like that in Hong Kong, since Cantonese has no "r" sound. We don't have an "sh" sound either, lol.
Though the standard pronunciation is probably the best overall. Certainly the easiest to understand.
Chinese : 你知道吗? Taiwan Chinese : 你造吗?
Chinese : 我喜欢你! Taiwan Chinese : 我轩你!
Well, nowadays when people say "Chinese", they do not necessarily mean ethnic Chinese. What they often mean is a Chinese citizen.
For example, Lee Kuan Yew (the founder of Singapore), is ethnically Chinese. But he is in fact a Singaporean.
Similar to Gary Locke. If you asked him what he is, he would say he is an American. (Though he is also ethnic Chinese).
As a Hong Konger, I am a PRC citizen. Though I also consider Taiwanese to be Chinese nationals (though not officially citizens), since they are born and they live within the borders of China, albeit the part administered by the "Republic of China" rather than the PRC.
The ROC government still believes that it is the rightful government of ALL China, so they do the same. Since I was born on "Chinese soil", they would consider me an ROC national, and if I were to visit there I would do so using a different permit from non-Chinese, and my HKSAR passport would not be stamped.
Nationality law of the Republic of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I wouldn't move to Taiwan though, frankly I prefer the weather in places like Northern China.
Chinese : 你知道吗? Taiwan Chinese : 你造吗?
Chinese : 我喜欢你! Taiwan Chinese : 我选你!
That reminds me of one time in college. I went to dinner with my Chinese friend, his Chinese girlfriend, and my (female) Taiwanese friend. The Chinese guy and the Taiwanese girl had known each other for years and got along fine. Dinner was going great until the Chinese girl turned to the Taiwanese girl and said, "after dinner, perhaps I'll teach you to speak Mandarin properly."
I don't think I've ever seen such an ugly cat-fight.
The Japanese interpretation was really bad! Funny tho...
Why do Chinese always portray Japanese in that way?
I like the Beijing Mandarin accent the most, with the rolling "r" sound.
Typical mainlander!
Perhaps your female Taiwanese friend came from the south with heavy local accent.
To be honest, Taiwanese in Taipei speak mandarin soundly much better than most mainlanders. From Beijing to inland who heavily influenced by local accent and dialect.
I like the Japanese part, the Taiwan part and the France most.
Afterwards, that's what my Taiwanese friend (who was fuming) told me, that her Mandarin was far more standard and sophisticated than the Chinese girl's. But as a non-speaker of Mandarin, it is not for me to say.