On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, alex chang wrote:

> Cantonese is usually spoken by the uneducated, Madirin is spoken by
> the educated. Cantonese is the more informal dialect, Madirin the

Wow, I think you are going to offend a lot of people saying that.  And
I don't think it is correct.  They are simply different languages,
spoken in different places.  (And it's "Mandarin".)

> more formal.  Listen to someone speak Cantonese, then listen to
> someone speak Madirin- you'll be able to tell right away which one's
> which.

Of course!  They're different languages, they sound quite different.
For example, their tonal systems are different -- Mandarin has four
tones, and I believe Cantonese has nine.

Wow, this is really getting off-topic!  Sorry.


> Something I learned at a very young age- you say do-jeh
> when someone gives you something (as in a gift), and
> you say m-goi when someone does something for you
> (as in a waiter bringing you food).
>
> --- Michael Carmack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 27, 2001 at 03:29:27PM -0300, Martin Mauri wrote:
> > > What's "cantonese"?
> > > And how do you say "thank you"?
> > >
> > > > I know how to say "thank you" in Cantonese. That's it.
> > > > And that I learned from a movie. Not much help. Want the
> > > > name of the movie?
> >
> > Cantonese is a dialect of Chinese, most prominently associated with
> > Hong Kong. (It's the language spoken in virtually all movies out of
> > Hong Kong.) Thank you can be translated as either do-jeh or m-goi.
> >
> > m.

Milt Epstein
Research Programmer
Software/Systems Development Group
Computing and Communications Services Office (CCSO)
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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