Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Both belong to the Sino-Tibetan language family, so why are there so few Han Chinese in Lhasa, Tibet, who can speak Tibetan?

Both belong to the Sino-Tibetan language family, so why are there so few Han Chinese in Lhasa, Tibet, who can speak Tibetan?

Sino-Tibetan languages ??have the same origin. The Sino-Tibetan language family also says that ancient Chinese and Tibetan are the same language. The Mandarin spoken by people today is so different from ancient Chinese that it is unimaginable. Nowadays, it’s very difficult for non-locals to learn Cantonese!

Cantonese, Hakka, Chaoshan, Hokkien, Hunan, Wu, Jiangxi, Wenzhou... all belong to Chinese.

Come on, do you understand? Do you know how to say it?

There is no pressure, and there is no real integration into the other person's life. For example, the barefoot doctors trained in Daliangshan in 1968 basically have no problem with being bilingual in both Yi and Han. The Han doctors above the district government who often go to the countryside for medical tours at least have no problem with their medical use in Yi. People who are stressed can't explain clearly how to take medicine, which will cause problems. of.

When I returned to work in Zhejiang, I discovered that at places where two provinces meet, such as Wujiang and Luxu in Jiangsu and Taozhuang and Fenhu in Zhejiang, ordinary people can speak Jiang and Zhejiang dialects anytime and anywhere.

As long as they understand the rules (and know pinyin), I think it is Hong Kong and Taiwanese, and people (young people) from mainland provinces will have no problem conquering it in two or three months!

Vigorously promote the popularization of the statutory language stipulated in the constitution - the national lingua franca. It is the last word that the books and texts are the same!

Because there are many people traveling to Lhasa, the actual situation is that there are fewer Han people working. Those who do business are mainly for tourists, and there is not much interaction with the local Tibetan people.

The large-scale spread of language is a need for ordinary people's lives, not feelings. Most people in the world are ordinary people. They choose what they want for life, rather than talking to themselves for feelings. Since the Chinese language is broad, there is no need to learn Tibetan.

It won’t do much good if you know it, and it won’t make any difference if you don’t know it.

Because of the compatibility and exclusivity of Chinese, there are currently many After a few months of living in China, foreigners hardly remember the native language they have used for more than 20 years.