Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - How to say everyday Cantonese?

How to say everyday Cantonese?

1. Come on, where are you going?

Mandarin: Where are you going?

2, I can't tell, and I'm beautiful!

Mandarin: Long time no see, beautiful again!

3. Have dinner together!

Mandarin: Let's have dinner together.

4. Is there a female introduction?

Mandarin: Do you have a girlfriend to introduce you?

5. Is it going well recently?

Mandarin: How's your work recently?

6. If you are bored, everyone will help you read the distance.

Mandarin: If there is anything bothering you, everyone will help you find a way to solve it.

7. Call me for tea when you are free, and keep me steady at any time.

Mandarin: Call me for tea when you are free. Call me anytime.

8. Why don't you give me money?

Mandarin: Excuse me, how much is this?

9. No, will it be better than the Buddha station?

Mandarin: To Mong Kok Railway Station? How to get there?

10, how long do I have to go? ?

Mandarin: How long will it take if I walk? ?

Introduction to Cantonese:

Cantonese is a dialect distributed in some areas (such as Sichuan and Shaanxi) and generally originated from Hakka dialect in Guangdong. Due to the similarity of languages, Cantonese speakers' ancestral homes include not only eastern Guangdong and northern Guangdong, but also the old Tingzhou area in Fujian (western Fujian). Because there are fewer people who speak Cantonese in Sichuan and Shaanxi, and they exist in the form of "dialect islands", Cantonese in these areas has been in a weak state for a long time, and it has gradually shrunk with the development of the times.

Cantonese source:

Hakka ancestors who moved from Guangdong to other areas in the Ming and Qing Dynasties generally called themselves "Cantonese" and called their own language "Cantonese". For example, since most of the Hakkas who moved to Sichuan from Huguang were originally from Guangdong, they claimed to be called "Cantonese" with him and spoke Cantonese (later changed to "Tukan dialect" to show the difference). In this "Huguang filling Sichuan", some Hakka ancestors chose southern Shaanxi (such as Shangluo) to settle down instead of going to Sichuan for development. After they get a rest, they don't forget their ancestral home, and even some villages are named "Guangdong" (for example, there is a guangdong village in Beikuanping Township, Shangzhou District), and their language is still called "Cantonese" up to now (as of 2008). According to scholars' research, Cantonese in these areas still retains some features of Hakka dialect, or can basically communicate with their ancestral homes, or has formed variants.