In the south, especially in Tainan, we call it “ #香腸熟肉”, which is commonly aka #黑白切. It’s is a kind of Taiwanese snacks/street food. The name is directly translated by its Taiwanese pronunciation, which roughly means 'randomly sliced foods.' More specifically, it refers to the cooked foods ready to be cut and fast serviced as various dishes, such as cuttlefish(花枝), shark meat(鯊魚肉), marinated foods—including eggs, dried bean curds, sausages, and pig’s intestine, etc. Just to name a few. All the foods here are not expensive, and often serve as side dishes along with braised meat rice or noodles. It’s definitely a must try if you ever visit Taiwan!
#Tainan
同時也有4部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過7萬的網紅The Michelle Chong Channel,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Hi guys, my name is Ying Wen! I hope to raise the standard of English in Singapore, One Word At A Time #OWAAT! :) In this episode, I talk about pronun...
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directly pronunciation 在 喬寶寶 Qbobo Facebook 的最佳貼文
Cantonese almost became the official language😊 I PROUD TO SPEAK #CANTONESE ❤️
Putonghua is the official language on the mainland, but if history had played out differently the vast majority could have been speaking Cantonese.
In 1912, shortly after the fall of the Qing dynasty, the founding fathers of the republic met to decide which language should be spoken in the new China.
Mandarin - now known as Putonghua [the common language] - was then a northern dialect spoken by the hated Manchurian officials. While it had served as China's lingua franca for centuries, many perceived it as an 'impure form' of Chinese.
Many of the revolutionary leaders, including Sun Yat-sen, were from Guangdong - which has long been China's land of new ideas. A great debate started between the delegates and eventually led to a formal vote. Cantonese lost out by a small margin to Putonghua and the rest is history.
While historians today still argue about the authenticity of the story, it is something Guangdong people love to tell. Many Cantonese speakers feel proud of their native language, saying it has more in common with ancient classical Chinese than Putonghua - which is a mix of northern dialects heavily influenced by Manchurian and Mongolian.
Linguists agree to some extent. 'Cantonese is closer to classical Chinese in its pronunciation and some grammar,' Jiang Wenxian, a Chinese language scholar, said. 'Using Cantonese to read classical poetry is a real pleasure,' he said. 'Many ancient poems don't rhyme when you read them in Putonghua, but they do in Cantonese.
'Cantonese retains a flavour of archaic and ancient Chinese. Nowadays few people understand classical Chinese, so Cantonese should be protected as a type of language fossil helping us study ancient Chinese culture.'
Cantonese is spoken by about 70 million people in Guangdong, Hong Kong, Macau and communities abroad.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, Guangdong was the only Chinese province allowed to trade directly with foreigners. Many Westerners at the time learned Cantonese. Up till very recently, there were more Cantonese speakers in overseas Chinese communities than Putonghua speakers. In Canada, for instance, Cantonese is the third most commonly spoken language after English and French.
directly pronunciation 在 The Michelle Chong Channel Youtube 的精選貼文
Hi guys, my name is Ying Wen! I hope to raise the standard of English in Singapore, One Word At A Time #OWAAT! :) In this episode, I talk about pronunciation!
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directly pronunciation 在 The Michelle Chong Channel Youtube 的最佳貼文
Hi guys, my name is Ying Wen! I hope to raise the standard of English in Singapore, One Word At A Time #OWAAT! :) In this episode, I talk about pronunciation and some commonly mispronounced words!
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Michelle Chong - https://instagram.com/immichellechong/
Left Profile - https://instagram.com/leftprofile/
FACEBOOK
Michelle Chong - https://facebook.com/michellechongrocks/
Left Profile - https://facebook.com/LeftProfilePage/
EMAIL
For business/artiste enquiries, email us directly at diana@leftprofile.com
VISIT OUR WEBSITE
https://leftprofile.com/
ADDRESS
Left Profile | Huat Films
18 Howard Road #09-05 Novelty BizCentre
Singapore 369585
directly pronunciation 在 Kento Bento Youtube 的最佳解答
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★ 10 Things You Didn’t Know About NATTO: https://youtu.be/Hyuyk7GJgd8
★ 10 Things You Didn't Know About RAMEN: https://youtu.be/p4TEixig6Vw
★ 5 WEIRD Japanese Food Trends on Social Media: https://youtu.be/ozp9SjNJa0c
★ 7 POPULAR Japanese Dishes That Are NOT Actually Japanese: https://youtu.be/7gdkq7_KZdo
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10 THINGS YOU DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT RAMUNE ラムネ (JAPANESE MARBLE SODA)
Ramune is a popular carbonated soft drink from Japan - one of the modern symbols of the Japanese summer.
Some people call it the most complicated soft drink in the world, but it’s really quite simple. The drink is pressure sealed with a marble from the inside, and you have this 'pushy device' that you push inside the neck to dislodge the marble.
1) RAMUNE WAS INVENTED BY A SCOT
In 1884 during the Meiji period, this Scottish dude, Alexander Cameron Sim, had his own Pharmaceutical company in Kobe. Apparently it was a trend amongst pharmacists to invent their own drink concoctions. Some were hits, some were misses. Sim's drink - named Mabu soda at the time, mabu meaning marble - was a massive hit. Eventually the name was changed to Ramune and the drink was sold nationwide. Ramune is an epic Japanese drink, so it’s no surprise Sim has his very own monument in Kobe.
2) RAMUNE WAS JAPAN'S FIRST EVER SOFT DRINK
We’re talking about the first mainstream commercialised soft drink in Japan. It wasn’t Coke. It wasn’t Ginger Ale. It was Ramune.
3) RAMUNE IS HEALTHIER THAN COKE
One reason Ramune has been growing in popularity is cause of the lower calorie and carbohydrate count. Although these levels can differ depending on the Ramune flavour. People trying to lose weight sometimes drink Ramune as a substitute for Coke or for any other regular soft drink.
4) PEOPLE INITIALLY THOUGHT RAMUNE DRINKS WERE BOMBS
Back in the 1850s, Matthew C. Perry, a Commodore of the United States Navy (who played a leading role in the opening of Japan to the West), brought carbonated sodas over to Japan. Perry and co. presented these special beverages as gifts.
A Johnny Knoxville type crew member thought it would be a funny idea to shake up some of the fizzy sodas before offering them to the Japanese. After it exploded in their faces, many thought they were bombs! It almost started a war.
Later on, when commercial Ramune was released to the public, many people were suspicious of this foreign mystery drink that may or may not explode in your face like a bomb. Not to mention carbonation was unheard of.
5) RAMUNE USED TO BE UNPOPULAR
It wasn’t called Ramune at the beginning. It was called ‘Remon Sui’ which directly translates to lemon water.
Eventually the name was changed to Remoneedo, which is the straight Japanese pronunciation of the word ‘lemonade’. And later on shortened to just Ramune. The drink then became a massive hit.
6) RAMUNE WAS ORIGINALLY MARKETED AS A PREVENTION FOR CHOLERA
This is bullcrap, but along with the Ramune name change, this bit of false marketing helped its popularity.
7) THERE ARE OVER 36 FLAVOURS OF RAMUNE
Ramune is super popular, but after the influx of newer soft drinks into the marketplace, like Coke, Fanta, Sprite, etc; the Ramune higher ups felt they needed to spice things up.
There are fruit flavours like banana, blueberry, grape, orange, green apple, kiwi, peach, pineapple, plum, cherry, coconut, mango, melon, pomelo, watermelon, raspberry, strawberry and lychee. Then there’s vanilla, chocolate, candy, root beer and coke flavours.
More WTF ones include champagne, bubble gum, green tea, chill oil, brussels sprout, corn cream stew (soup), teriyaki, curry, octopus, takoyaki, kimchi, squid ink and wasabi.
8) RAMUNE WITHOUT THE MARBLE ISN'T RAMUNE
Apparently Ramune is only Ramune if it comes in that uniquely shaped bottle (called a codd-neck bottle) with the marble in it.
9) YOU CAN MAKE RAMUNE AT HOME
*watch vid for instructions*
10) RAMUNE USED TO BE THE WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS SOFT DRINK
Kids wanted the marble, and were willing to break the glass bottle to get it. Nowadays bottles are unbreakable and kiddy-proof so are no longer dangerous.
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