Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - How do you pronounce the words "annoying" and "unpleasant"? It's easy to make jokes if you can't tell them clearly.

How do you pronounce the words "annoying" and "unpleasant"? It's easy to make jokes if you can't tell them clearly.

Dirty, read: (wò chuò), inconsistent, read: (jǔyǔ).

Dirty is a Chinese character, and the pinyin is wò chuò. The definition is not clear; Dirty. Describe people with poor quality and impure thoughts. Describe narrow-minded, confined to the section. From Selected Works of Zhang Heng: "It's nothing to be stingy and forget crickets." Xue Zong's Note: "Hanshu Note: Dirty, small. "It's easy to spell" lying ",so be careful.

Disharmony is a Chinese word, pronounced as jǔ yǔ, which is usually used as a noun. The word disharmony has three meanings. The first meaning is that the teeth are not aligned up and down, and the metaphor is inconsistent. The second meaning is metaphorical injustice; Uneven. The third meaning refers to disharmony and loss, which is often used in writing. From "Nine Arguments" written by Chu and Song Yu in the Warring States Period: A round chisel is clumsy, but I know it's hard to get in.

The history of Chinese characters

Chinese characters have been used for the longest time so far, and they are also the only inheritors of the ancient Otomachi system. Chinese characters have always been the main official language in China.

In ancient times, Chinese characters were also used as the only international communication language in East Asia. Before the 20th century, they were still the official written standard characters of Japan, the Korean Peninsula, Vietnam and Ryukyu, and all East Asian countries created their own Chinese characters to some extent.

It should be noted that Japanese, Korean Peninsula, Vietnamese and other countries were deeply influenced by China culture in history, and even other languages borrowed Chinese characters. In the non-Chinese character system, Japan has formulated a list of commonly used Chinese characters, and South Korea has also formulated basic Chinese characters for education, while Vietnam, North Korea and Mongolia, which used Chinese characters in history, have now given up Chinese characters.