6:35 "suo liao" is the old mandarin version came out in 1913 aka 老國音 which is based on the peripheral dialects of Peking. In 1923 a newer version of mandarin came out as 新國音 changed parts of the pronunciation hence "su liao". p.s. im taiwanese *fun fact: 老國音 has been widely preserved in taiwan due to unknown reason and 新國音 is the unanimous version of pronunciation in PRC.
@RTX 3090 I got a friend who went to work in Singapore, get married and had children over there, then he brought his whole family back to Malaysia because he wanted to start his own business, I remember his children refused to speak Mandarin and only reply with English each time when someone talked to them, he later sent his children to SJK(C), and later SMJK(C), I remember went back to my hometown during college sem-break and meeting them, now they talking to each other with fluent Mandarin with rich vocabulary.
5:42 Container should be 容器 / 器皿 ; 盒子 = box , in this situation we also call it 飯盒 lunch box . So only in this situation, container is default as 飯盒 / 盒子 but not direct Chinese translation
that german-chinese guy actually has good pronunciation and he's trying hard enough! meanwhile the girl in yellow uh.... a bit cringe ngl some answers really cannot make it leh not sure if she's trying to seem funny or really don't know lmao
Her pronunciations of some words actually sounded pretty ok when she was subconsciously speaking in Chinese towards the end of the video, minus those words she was pretending to not know how to say. 😑
Not surprised how bad chinese is spoken or answer by the younger generation nowadays, Thomas the german chinese(If anyone know him from WahBanana!), yes he is half german and chinese but the way he talk and answer is very good in fact far better compared to locals(gotta to admit that) and the hawker uncle in white got my respect(Uncle talk and answer in excellent fluent chinese as he is a veteran), both of them speak and answered very fluently😊😎👍 The girl in yellow umm what i am going to say... cmi X8 liao😅 Good content TMTV😎👍 Nice😎
Usually the veterans speak fluent chinese and malay. My first time visiting to Singapore in 2017, I was surprised that I had to speak in English with the Malays there but the Chinese uncle, he insisted to speak in Malay with me.
So do you wish for people who laughs as a coping mechanism have a mental breakdown in front of everyone? Is that it? Talk all you want about how she's not that fluent in her mother tongue but don't talk down to people who laughs as a coping mechanism, you think we can control that? Shame on you, i'm sorry if you meant it in other ways but from the way I see it, you're looking down on people who laughs in co response to things that makes them feel nervous/upset/sad/agitated.
I think aside from the comedic scenes from the video, I think that this approach does help in raising awareness in using more recyclables and reusables as utilising them reduce monetary cost to both the vendors and us as consumers! It also helps reduce the amount of plastic waste on Earth and projects Singapore into a more sustainable country! Thank you to Tropic Monsters TV and ZeroWasteSG for the initiative 🙏
when i hear the uncle say that "we have to save the environment ,we have to change our mind", suddenly I find out why Singapore will do the best in most of the things 👍(at my country, uncle auntie will not think open minded like that...😅)
Singapore only 注重English,even the one and only 南洋大学 was closed. I think hor if I go to Singapore for a trip, talking in Chinese workers while buying stuff, 80 percent wouldn’t know their own mother tongue.which is a disgrace.
@@averyyoung3569 this is a major problem since china is becoming so powerful, a lot people will need to learn chinese to get to do business now, even in malaysia now a lot of malay know chinese
No disrespect to anyone but it was agonising to watch how some of them struggled with those really basic Chinese words. The most capable person was the son of a German. Supposedly having a proper Chinese speaking mother made the difference. Yet again it could just be for show lah.
True, maybe is the internet thats making them focus on english rather than chinese. But I think its easier to learn chinese first rather than english. 真是的这些新家坡华人😔.
Actually Chinese is a language while Mandarin is the standard and official dialect of Chinese, just like Cantonese, another dialect. But these days people are confusing them, so both can represent the language i think
How i call them as a Malaysian hokkien 1. Straw - Zui Chao 2. hawker center - jiak guan (chan guan for restaurant) 3. container - zua (paper) / ti (metal) ark (box) 4. plastic bag - zua lok 5. reusable bag - wan boh lok
Having watched your language test series, I am curious about where did you find these people who could not show fluency in any language.How can they lead a life without mastering any language? The Singaporeans I came across were all proud of the country's multilingualism and spoke very good English and Mandarin.
I watched all 3 series and found the good looking half Chinese should be proud of as the mother still teach him Mandarin successfully.. in Malay episode I could say the winner is again another good looking boy who can answer most of the questions correct, better than the makcik2 🤦🏽♀️... in Tamil episode, yeah.. I think only the siblings and the young girl not doing well. This is a very good program to appreciate our own mother tounge... It shows who are we inside ourselves..btw we still can learn and learn guys
i think theres a clear explanation for this. Many tend to speak in english at home and in their daily lives, so the only time they come in contact with chinese is during mother tongue lessons in sch. And everyone knows you cant be fluent just through examinations and memorisation, you need to use it daily in conversations. Thats why Thomas was better since he probably speaks mandarin at home with his mom. Its the same with China learning englishm since they don't use it at all in their daily lives and only learn it though memorisation and for examinations, they end up forgetting most of it and not being fluent. So either the education system gets a reform or family/friends have to start speaking mandarin tgt
actually i think it's very hard for oversea chinese because many words like "reusable bag" or "plastic bag" are modern words, oversea chinese didn't have these words when they left china.
@@大马柔佛区自干五-靑 什么意思?我本身就是02年出生的本土新加坡人… 和上一辈的人交谈就能感受到了我们新加坡中文水平每况愈下的趋势,虽然是必然的,但还是很痛心…… Although I'm also guilty that I don't speak Chinese often as english is the lingua franca in Singapore, but I'll take the effort to keep in touch with Chinese language every now and then because i really feel that Chinese is very 博大精深 (deep and sophisticated). Hope that Singaporeans would not forget their mother tongue in future. Or worst, to be proud of this shameful tag of not knowing how to speak Chinese.
10:36 goreng pisang , is singaporean malay language similar to indonesian language? example indon use sepak bola , while malaysian use bola sepak and pisang goreng. do you guys also say goreng ayam ? or ayam goreng?
really such an embarrassment lol plus the fact that youngsters these days thinks its cool to be bad in their mother tongue... these are pretty simple, i can't believe our chinese has gotten so bad
I work with students from Japan, Korea, Germany, India, China, Indonesia etc etc. The parents are the ones who insisted to speak their mother tongue at home and only mother tongue. No English at home. Most of them are bilingual/ trilingual fluently. Some Singaporeans too. Unfortunately, only the real 'atas' profile ones, tries to preserve their mother tongue. Most of the middle class/ lower class will try to act atas by speaking English /Singlish and thinks that English is the way to go. Can you imagine all the family members, friends and relatives are all with Chinese speaking background and speaks fluently, but when they talk to a young kid in the family, they auto switch to English /broken English (they tried to avoid Singlish, but didn't master proper English). In the end, the kid Mandarin Cmi, English 'half bucket'. What's with speaking in mother tongue? Feel low class/ less atas/ inferior or what? Then throw the task to the Chinese tutors when the child have free resources around them. Speaking from a local Singaporean Chinese family, where my parents from kumpung don't speak English/ Singlish at home- Pure proper Mandarin cuz they don't know English (from Chinese school), won't jiapalang mix Mandarin and English in a sentence. So naturally we speak in proper sentences - meaning, won't add English to Chinese sentences or add Chinese words to English sentences. Where did I learn my English? Proper English from school teachers. Got an A for O'levels and B for English, no tuition at all. I'm fortunate to grow up with my grandparents who speaks pure Hokkien to me. Not like some grandparents trying to follow the trend of their kids, totally don't speak dialect or mix Chinese and broken English. - honestly, some young parents think it's low class for the little kids to learn dialect and looked down on it. Sadly, the grandparents played along, thinking that they should have better English environment and by speaking more 'English' (broken English) helps the grandchildren. Grasping one more language = the ability to help or reach out to one more community. When I volunteered at an old folks home with other peers, they were nice, but couldn't understand well even with simple words like water when the elderly asked for it. At the end of the day, I received decent command of Mandarin, English and Hokkien. Singlish, it's just a natural what.... Don't even need to learn it specially lah. Was chosen and outstationed to Shanghai as I was bilingual pretty fluently as compared to my colleagues of similar profile/or even when I'm a junior at work. Got chosen largely due to my command of Mandarin- need to do training in Mandarin with professional lingos- I seem to be the one that need the least effort to groom for this area wise. In China, I met a local Fujian person and he was surprised that as a Singaporean, I can hold a conversation with him in Hokkien! Not even his local colleagues from Shanghai or Nanjing could do that as they have their own set of dialect. How much can you pass down to your next generation? In school, only 10% of the entire year x 10years is taught in Mandarin, in Chinese class. 90% of their awake time is in English/ Singlish. For parents who make effort to preserve mother tongue, at least push it to a 30% of their time, for sure, the kid will definitely perform much better than the people in the video. Especially those who can speak proper mother tongue, I highly encourage to carry the practice of speaking in mother tongue with your child. I have elite Indian parents from India asking if I teach my class in Chinese hor.... Don't complain why big companies don't choose locals. Ask what we lack and lose out in this global market lor. Btw, with my A in Singapore Chinese standard, I sounded like a primary school level in China. So... These people just lost a big pie and a bunch of opportunities. 1 language = 1 more market. I don't know why the young kids are 'proud' for being not good in their mother tongue, but proud that they know English- the more 'atas language'? My colleagues of other races are having the same complain that they have to send their kids to tutors for Malay and Tamil, saying how poor they are in their mother tongue. Hello??? How to be good when their own mother don't speak mother tongue to the kids? Poor kids. Kanna blamed and pressured for problems that are not truly their fault. Come on lah... How bad can mother tongue go as compared to broken English. Talking about those who can speak proper mother tongue but choose not to speak ones...
Singaporean chinese still better than chinese indonesian, most of us can't speak chinese at all, i myself as a chinese indonesian only speak a little, actually it's so embarassing, we have at least should learn our real language(chinese).. but we have a reason why this is happened in indonesia.. but some of us still speak our dialect like hokkien, canton, hakka, etc at home even thought not fluent in mandarin chinese
@@ignatios6393 the fact is that Chinese is part of major exam and that shows the importance of it in a certain level. But many people dropped the subject unfortunately.
Singaporeans' lack in proficiency in the language is a result of the lack of a chinese speaking environment in school, work and probably home where the main language used is still English. It is generally also widely acceptable in our society to use language interchangeably to express ourselves. Unless we are expected to use Chinese and with good consistency to converse at work, it will always be a challenge to keep up with the Chinese speaking cities in the world. Practice makes perfect!
塑料袋 (sù liào dài),"塑” for standard pinyin is (sù liào dài),for daily life, "su" or "suo" are acceptable from my understanding 😃 any wrong please correct me☺️
Mandarin is not our mother tongue per se, but other sinitic languages like Hokkien, Cantonese, teochew. Singapore's Lingua franca is English, mandarin education is simply forced on us by virtue of us being ethnically Chinese. It's nothing to be proud of
Also, teachers don't really teach conversational Chinese, more of "academic" Chinese? They're quite restricted to tests and school settings. I always found it a pity because most of us don't even know the names of simple everyday things like food ingredients
@@qoenntrell thank you for this message. There is indeed no shame in being less proficient in Mandarin. I feel more ashamed that I can't even speak my own dialect, Hainanese.
There is a lesser need to actually have the ability to be able to converse fully in mandarin. In most cases, conversing in basic Mandarin + English words is usually enough for another party to understand e.g. if you want straw, most people that I know would just say "Aunty/Uncle, 我要 straw" to food store owners. Personally, the only times that I use Mandarin is only when I converse with family/relatives and when I go out to converse with store owners e.g. buying food. Workplaces in Singapore mostly use English since English is recognized as like the main language to converse between different races and also in school/university lessons are usually taught in English except mother tongue lessons (some mother tongue teachers in my secondary school also incorporate english words when they teach so that students can understand them better). If you go out to hawker centre/malls, most store owners (even older generation) knows at least basic english or enough english to get customer orders/payment and have English names for food items. 99% food stores in singapore are labelled with numbers for each menu item so if your Mandarin is really bad, you can just simply say the menu item number in Mandarin or just point to the menu item picture. Delivery apps now with pickup/delivery options are quite common now so you do not even need to converse with store owners. So there is really a lesser need to use mother tongue these days.
I believe in the future, most Singaporean Chinese parents will instead wanna greatly improve their kids Mandarin as China is getting more dominant will be much more so in future. So a great prospect for future will be working for Chinese firms or serving Chinese massive and affluent market. Their children's Mandarin will be laughed at when they are ethnic Chinese themselves and even are of majority race in their country, if they still have current level of Mandarin fluency.
Most of us Singaporean Chinese actually hail from the southern part of China, where Mandarin was originally NOT the lingua franca of the region. Our true mother tongue languages are actually Hokkien 福建閩南話, Teochew 潮州(汕)話, Cantonese 廣東話/粵語 and all the other 'dialects' around. And in case you wonder why I included the inverted commas, that's because the difference between Hokkien and Mandarin, from a linguistic p.o.v, allows them to be considered distinct languages It is not shameless if one of us can't speak Mandarin 官話 well, a borrowed Northern Chinese language. It is shameless that we have lost touch with our "dialects" because of Mandarin's political dominance.
@@goldkwi You don't have to explain to them because they won't listen to you. They just drop their Mandarin propaganda and go, whining about how Singaporeans are so bad at their designated "mother tongue" while deliberately ignoring the fact that Mandarin have never been Singaporean Chinese's real mother tongue. They collectively shame those who don't speak mandarin like a native twisted-tongued Northern Chinese, who historically have never had any contact with Singapore, with demeaning comments (your chinese embarrassing blahblah, china big market blahblah...) in order to perpetuate their wishful mandarin superiority.
Actually the ambassador on the right side speaks pretty decent mandarin as well based on his open ended responses but I think many attention goes to the uncle and half German guy. 我的个人看法是考查名词不一定能精准地反映出掌握华语的真实水平,而是要看他是否能以通顺的句子,并适当的运用关联词来持续一个对话。The irony thing is as much as our conversational Chinese standard dropping, the requirement of local oral examination levels up. Not only they are required to narrate the video content fully, but also to use good phrases 俗语+好词好句 to score.
@@iamjaydennn This is a rather general term for food container and is quite commonly used in Taiwan and China. It somehow doesn’t click with Singaporeans.
Not all Malaysians can speak Chinese lah. Those that went to Chinese schools speak Chinese whereas those that went to English schools struggle with their Chinese and possibly not even as good as these Singaporeans in this video.
Bruh what do you expect from them most of them already accepted english as their mother tongue ever since Lee kuan yew started language policy😂 still i count it pretty good and enough to call them as bilingual comparing to my countrymen. And it's really hard for children to learn multiple language
@@deadpool113 Hahaha, maybe I am too naive. I was taught by a teacher from primary school geography class that Singapore is a Chinese people account for 70% country. Then I suddenly found out that the Chinese in Singapore can no longer speak Chinese. It is quite shocking. Hhh
@@hangli9419 Yeah i reckon it's more than 75%. You can easily call sg as a gigantic chinatown but the thing is it's an extremely multiethnic society. I was merely a foreigner student from Korea and i was an outsider but i met and learnt how diverse their history and ppl are. Back in early 20th century the society was too fragmented. You may heard of Fujian people. The hokkiens. Even they were the most populated ppl in sg there were malay, tamil, eurasian biracials, javanese, british, arab, peranakan, etc... oh don't forget all those chinese ppl's grp shattered by their region. chinese settlers didn't have bond to each others they treated each others as rivals. But ever since China was unified by the power of the nationalist party, mainland wanted to take control of singaporeans. So they wanted chinese singaporean to be one nation and loyal to the republic. One method for that was teaching mandarin. The republic's policy was somewhat against the regional grp's benefit. It grew up the patriotism and nationlism as 'chinese' but each chinese groups should gave up the benefit and independency of their community. And after ww2 threat of japan ignited chinese nationalism but also it realized them the fragility of mainland. After china was conquered by communists, they gave up their kinship and loyal to china. That's how they became 'singaporean' nowadays. And the leaders of sp wanted to unite the country into one nation. The language was really matter. Lee kuan yew was different from all those previous chinese leaders who wanted to prioritize chinese. He looked ahead and found they need to unite every of their ppl to lead that small country. So he suggested english as official and general language to communicate with every ethnics of ppl. So that is the dark side of the unification policy. The more they wanna unify each people the more they forgetting their root.
Why so many negative comments here. I am malaysian btw. Hope this comments not come from Malaysians. Those words that they ask is hard and “uncommonly”use by majority of people.
1. Straw = 吸管 2. Hawker Centre = 小販中心 3. Container = 飯盒 / 外賣盒 / 打包盒 4. Plastic bag = 塑料袋 ( Suo Liao Dai ), the German guy is correct 👍 5. Reusable bag = 環保袋 / 循環袋
Recommend everyone learn Chinese include Malay and Indian. Becos it will benefits you and an advantage for your career. Especially Malay and Indian becos your Chinese client in China will be very impressed and more willing to close the deal with you. If one can knows English and Chinese well one can do business or deal with both the west and the east super power.
@@Jack-hy2ki But you are right, the accent doesn't matter, the average Singaporean does have a language advantage over the average Chinese or American.
Why don't make a video an ask Eurasians how good they are at Chinese and Malay even though it's not their mother tongue lol I'm Eurasian and I speak mandarin Cantonese and hokkien.even though I'm only quarter Chinese. Good video by the way
Who could answer everything correctly? Stay tuned for next week's episode!
lol
@@itz_medwin LOL WHAT
GUESS WHAT
HOW'S MY LIVE ANSWER JUST NOW.... HAHAHAHHAHAHAAAA..... GOOD
Ez
6:35 "suo liao" is the old mandarin version came out in 1913 aka 老國音 which is based on the peripheral dialects of Peking. In 1923 a newer version of mandarin came out as 新國音 changed parts of the pronunciation hence "su liao".
p.s. im taiwanese
*fun fact: 老國音 has been widely preserved in taiwan due to unknown reason and 新國音 is the unanimous version of pronunciation in PRC.
我家这边方言讲suo料,如果讲普通话就说su料
河南方言里这个字也念suo
It surprised me to know Thomas's Chinese proficiency
bruh i think hes better than the host, the hosts other similar videos in chinese shows hes not very proficient himself
Yes he's so good at it!
his mom is from china-
Too easy for Malaysian.
Malaysian : hard MEH?!
So easy!!!
I'm also Malaysian.....
一点都不难,将简单
Malaysian: Are u humiliating me?
Berlagaknye😂😂😂
@@nadiahamir321 Tahap kesusahan soalannya hanya tahap SJKC, pelajar bukan Cina yg masuk SJKC pun boleh jawab dengan senang.
"Suo Liao Dai" is kind of Sichuan accent, In standard mandarin, we call the plastic bag "su liao dai"
我们大部分四川人还是读“su”,不过可能有极个别口音读“suo”吧
@@淋雨一直走-z7i还是看地方吧 毕竟十里不同音
Nope,I say it too
@@wentaohu2932 可能吧
I say Suo Liao -from north China
The white shirt uncle is the MVP lol
Honestly, I think the uncle did a great job. He was able to answer all the questions and also the ½ Chinese and German guy also did a great job too.
Here‘s Taiwan version:
1.吸管
2.美食中心
3.保鮮盒
4.塑膠袋
5.環保袋/購物袋(平常人常用詞)
by a malaysian lives taiwan ten years~
Malaysian Chinese said: Kindergarten level 😂
I never knew their chinese was actually this bad lmao, no wonder they always sound kinda cringe when speaking it 😂😂🤣
Jokes aside, that's really sad.
Actually 🤣🤣🤣
@RTX 3090 I got a friend who went to work in Singapore, get married and had children over there, then he brought his whole family back to Malaysia because he wanted to start his own business, I remember his children refused to speak Mandarin and only reply with English each time when someone talked to them, he later sent his children to SJK(C), and later SMJK(C), I remember went back to my hometown during college sem-break and meeting them, now they talking to each other with fluent Mandarin with rich vocabulary.
Me malay yang learn mandarin 1 year pun can. Hahaha
@@madcat97 i think they purposely picked the bad ones for laughs cuz even the ppl ik who r rlly bad at chinese knows some of these
I’m malaysian malay, and i speak Mandarin & Hokkien 💕
Yo how u learn lol
@@waffelo4681 school... and friends 😀
@@nashikinworks501 takpa tiada salahnya kalo kita belajar lagi bahasa lain sebab memang ade faedahnya~
没关系,如果我们多学别的语言对我们是有好处的~
Boleh la buat channel blajar bhs chinese en...haha..
@malaysia boleh spread love, not hate :)
the one in yellow seems to have just graduated from a kindergarten two days ago in her early twenties.
Xiao Fan Yuan = Small Rice Round!
But she cute leh 😂😂😂
I bet if they're searching job in Malaysia they also will have trouble to see "mandarin/cantonese speaker only" requirement
Old generation are very good to their mother tongue and also malay. This is a good for young generation
Betul tu
container is more like 容器 box is 盒子 but when they’re used on food, the same thing.
I as a Malaysian Chinese, the 重用袋 really made my day sia... So creative 🤣
Hey there i.did not get that they said tamil ? What is it can you please explain
It’s 环保袋
5:42 Container should be 容器 / 器皿 ; 盒子 = box , in this situation we also call it 飯盒 lunch box . So only in this situation, container is default as 飯盒 / 盒子 but not direct Chinese translation
that german-chinese guy actually has good pronunciation and he's trying hard enough! meanwhile the girl in yellow uh.... a bit cringe ngl some answers really cannot make it leh not sure if she's trying to seem funny or really don't know lmao
The girl in yellow don't know chinese nvm, she don't even know the difference between 3 words and 4 words 小饭圆???
Rachel is trying too hard to be bad at Chinese, cringe AF, not like her English is any better.
yes bimbo
@ah tan yah bimbo is the word comes out of ma mind also
I don't know why anyone would want to be trying so hard to be bad at a language... Speaks alot about their character...
Her pronunciations of some words actually sounded pretty ok when she was subconsciously speaking in Chinese towards the end of the video, minus those words she was pretending to not know how to say. 😑
Hawker Center can be 熟食中心 also
Now I know why people are surprised that I can speak mandarin well when I told them I'm from Singapore 😅
So am I the only one who calls plastic bags as "zhidai紙袋"??(as a Malaysian😂)
In sg also like that but proper Chinese not zhidai
塑料袋/袋子 is acceptable. 纸袋 is paper bag
可能是,纸袋一般说用纸做的吧,plastic bag一般叫塑料袋,台湾叫塑胶袋
Yes, Malaysians usually use 纸袋,although obviously 纸 is paper.
?紙袋不是paper的嗎?
My sister-in-law is Chinese but she only understands Malay, if you talk chinese with her..her will talk malay with you .lol
She must be a real pranakan/nyonya. Huge respect. 👍
What?!
@@azlirazli7500 ???
Peranakan/Nyonya are those with malay and chinese parents
Disgraceful af. Simple daily Chinese also fail.
救命,how can the lady in yellow shirt speak such bad Chinese!
@ah tan I wonder how her mother would feel after watching this video!🙈
@ah tan But you know what?the even more pathetic fact,that lady in balck t shirt didnt even want to try!
还是老阿伯的华语流利。德川混血的小哥也很棒
那两个男生也很流利
Not surprised how bad chinese is spoken or answer by the younger generation nowadays, Thomas the german chinese(If anyone know him from WahBanana!), yes he is half german and chinese but the way he talk and answer is very good in fact far better compared to locals(gotta to admit that) and the hawker uncle in white got my respect(Uncle talk and answer in excellent fluent chinese as he is a veteran), both of them speak and answered very fluently😊😎👍
The girl in yellow umm what i am going to say... cmi X8 liao😅 Good content TMTV😎👍 Nice😎
she's literally like "why am i still here, just to suffer"
Usually the veterans speak fluent chinese and malay. My first time visiting to Singapore in 2017, I was surprised that I had to speak in English with the Malays there but the Chinese uncle, he insisted to speak in Malay with me.
@@Kimi91Warrior Yup the veterans usually know chinese and malay and they tend to insist speaking in either language there like in your case malay🤔😎
@@madcat97 True😎
The girl in yellow is really embarrassing. It’s not a laughing matter and nothing to be proud of.
she's pretty so it makes up for everything
@@pabloemilioescobargaviria9914 and that’s on today’s society
@@pabloemilioescobargaviria9914 simp
That’s literally how most singaporeans are like
So do you wish for people who laughs as a coping mechanism have a mental breakdown in front of everyone? Is that it?
Talk all you want about how she's not that fluent in her mother tongue but don't talk down to people who laughs as a coping mechanism, you think we can control that? Shame on you, i'm sorry if you meant it in other ways but from the way I see it, you're looking down on people who laughs in co response to things that makes them feel nervous/upset/sad/agitated.
Lady in yellow trying very hard to be funny . Girl pls
I encountered stalls that do not let you use your own containers. They cite hygiene reasons and need to pay extra to use their containers.
I think aside from the comedic scenes from the video, I think that this approach does help in raising awareness in using more recyclables and reusables as utilising them reduce monetary cost to both the vendors and us as consumers! It also helps reduce the amount of plastic waste on Earth and projects Singapore into a more sustainable country! Thank you to Tropic Monsters TV and ZeroWasteSG for the initiative 🙏
when i hear the uncle say that "we have to save the environment ,we have to change our mind", suddenly I find out why Singapore will do the best in most of the things 👍(at my country, uncle auntie will not think open minded like that...😅)
The 'suo liao dai' is not wrong tho, anyway finally can see Jmiah back in the street interview series again, best lahh 😂
Ya, it's correct. Taiwanese all say it this way.
It's correct Chinese term. Don't forget china alone is how big n how many states.
It is sùliàodài
actually su liao dai is also wrong because su liao is one word. so it should be 'suliao dai'.
@@yxeanget-any su liao is actually two words. In chinese each “syllable” is one word.
That half Chinese guy even know the Szechuan “Plastic Mandarin” He said Suo Liao Dai🤣🤣🤣That's pretty native lah
塑料中文送给塑料袋
😁
sù liào dài
that guy's Chinese level is almost the same as the RUclipsr's.
I've been calling it Suo Liao Dai my whole life...
Finally the kind of content i subbed TMTV for. 🤣. Can't wait for next week!
50% German puts Jeremiah to shame! Everytime I see Jeremiah is like how did he pass his Chinese in JC, thought it’s a pre-requisite for Uni admission
singapore exams are mostly memory based
Its no more the prerequisite! Nowadays no need to do well for mtl exam alr
Lady in yellow is such a turn off.
i thought her watermelon joke was funny tho
ikr ugh
singapore young teenager chinese are really dissapointing, all these should be very easy for them but they cant answer
Cuz their parents themselves speak english to their kids
Singapore only 注重English,even the one and only 南洋大学 was closed. I think hor if I go to Singapore for a trip, talking in Chinese workers while buying stuff, 80 percent wouldn’t know their own mother tongue.which is a disgrace.
@@averyyoung3569 this is a major problem since china is becoming so powerful, a lot people will need to learn chinese to get to do business now, even in malaysia now a lot of malay know chinese
No disrespect to anyone but it was agonising to watch how some of them struggled with those really basic Chinese words. The most capable person was the son of a German. Supposedly having a proper Chinese speaking mother made the difference. Yet again it could just be for show lah.
True, maybe is the internet thats making them focus on english rather than chinese. But I think its easier to learn chinese first rather than english. 真是的这些新家坡华人😔.
@@happyfyodor3906 u wrote 新加坡 wrong...
Chinese is a race … Mandarin is the language … sigh …
Actually Chinese is a language while Mandarin is the standard and official dialect of Chinese, just like Cantonese, another dialect. But these days people are confusing them, so both can represent the language i think
Chinese is also a language lmfao. Chinese is an umbrella language it includes all the other dialects like mandarin, Hokkien, cantonese etc
Mandarin is part of big Chinese language tree
Nice one Thomas!!
How i call them as a Malaysian hokkien
1. Straw - Zui Chao
2. hawker center - jiak guan (chan guan for restaurant)
3. container - zua (paper) / ti (metal) ark (box)
4. plastic bag - zua lok
5. reusable bag - wan boh lok
Lots of dialects in Mainland China pronounce 塑 as Suo (including my native tongue) so there should be no problem at all.
Hahahas when i saw Thomas, i thought Keiji would be here too. I got all KorLeck.
10:36 Pisang Goreng btw
I'm appalled at the standards of young Singaporean's chinese...
Don’t be, they’re proud of it
Having watched your language test series, I am curious about where did you find these people who could not show fluency in any language.How can they lead a life without mastering any language? The Singaporeans I came across were all proud of the country's multilingualism and spoke very good English and Mandarin.
? their first language is probably English so I assume they've mastered that no?
I watched all 3 series and found the good looking half Chinese should be proud of as the mother still teach him Mandarin successfully.. in Malay episode I could say the winner is again another good looking boy who can answer most of the questions correct, better than the makcik2 🤦🏽♀️... in Tamil episode, yeah.. I think only the siblings and the young girl not doing well. This is a very good program to appreciate our own mother tounge... It shows who are we inside ourselves..btw we still can learn and learn guys
I think container can be translated into 容器(a more general term), for a plastic bag, we say 塑膠袋 in Taiwan, 塑料 sounds more like raw materials.
We also say 塑膠袋 in Singapore, 塑料袋 is more common among those taught by Chinese nationals
@@qoenntrell Good to know, thank you for your sharing
i think theres a clear explanation for this. Many tend to speak in english at home and in their daily lives, so the only time they come in contact with chinese is during mother tongue lessons in sch. And everyone knows you cant be fluent just through examinations and memorisation, you need to use it daily in conversations. Thats why Thomas was better since he probably speaks mandarin at home with his mom. Its the same with China learning englishm since they don't use it at all in their daily lives and only learn it though memorisation and for examinations, they end up forgetting most of it and not being fluent. So either the education system gets a reform or family/friends have to start speaking mandarin tgt
wahh i saw myself in grabfood attire 😂 3:55
actually i think it's very hard for oversea chinese because many words like "reusable bag" or "plastic bag" are modern words, oversea chinese didn't have these words when they left china.
我本身是土生土长的新加坡人,我既然没有想到现在的年轻人中文越来越差劲。。看到这个视频的这一刻我的心真的寒了😭😭😭😭
大陆人和台湾人的英语都越来越好了... 然后都说中文...
@@nehcooahnait7827 中文本来就是我们的母语,不能忘本😋😋😋
而且还觉得华语不精很好笑,很可爱。孩子们的水平和态度真的是堪忧。
普通话或我们称的华语并不是我们的母语,最多只能说是华人之间的通用语,除非你或你的祖辈来自北京,而我们的真正母语是我们各自籍贯的方言。
中文不重要,没关系。
"8:41 Whoa decompose bro." 😂 He just dug a grave for himself.
You know that uncle has been waiting his whole life for this moment LOL
I somehow sense that Ms Yellow is proud of her inability to master more than 1 language, or trying to play up her "bimbo-ness" in front of the camera.
I’m singaporean. And can only effectively speak in English. So I’m not surprised.
Very nice Collab, keeping your entertainment and also meaningful
那些连这些字眼都不会的,真的需要找个洞钻进去…而且不会还在那儿装可爱,一笑而过…明明就不是什么值得骄傲的事。我们新加坡的华文教育真的有待加强
请问您的00后?好奇
@@大马柔佛区自干五-靑 什么意思?我本身就是02年出生的本土新加坡人… 和上一辈的人交谈就能感受到了我们新加坡中文水平每况愈下的趋势,虽然是必然的,但还是很痛心…… Although I'm also guilty that I don't speak Chinese often as english is the lingua franca in Singapore, but I'll take the effort to keep in touch with Chinese language every now and then because i really feel that Chinese is very 博大精深 (deep and sophisticated). Hope that Singaporeans would not forget their mother tongue in future. Or worst, to be proud of this shameful tag of not knowing how to speak Chinese.
@@tanguoxiong2226 my Japanese and Korean is much better than my Chinese what a pity but at least I’m still able to hold a convo in Chinese .私は中国語が大変嫌い
問個問個
在台灣 我們會認為自己的母語應該是台灣話啊客家話或原住民語還有外省人自己的方言
那為什麼在新加坡的華人中大部分的長輩口中說的都是福建話,而新一代的你們卻認為你們的母語是華語,或者我們口中的中文??求解
@@duroi-j6f
蛤
我會說台語啊
我是說為什麼你們會覺得中文是母語啦
而不是福建話?
btw其實我是馬台混血
Whoa now I know Thomas Chinese soo good sia!! Nice one Thomas! U ACED IT1️⃣🔥🔥👏👏
When he asked what is plastic in chinese, my lil brother far away at the back proudly said 'su liao dai!' hahaha
Alamak, all of those words were so easy as ABC.
what is container? I only know Tupperware
box for food in general? not a specific brand?
10:36 goreng pisang , is singaporean malay language similar to indonesian language?
example indon use sepak bola , while malaysian use bola sepak and pisang goreng.
do you guys also say goreng ayam ? or ayam goreng?
Bola ,pisang dan ayam is the main word,we put it in front
We say goreng pisang, but ayam goreng
really such an embarrassment lol plus the fact that youngsters these days thinks its cool to be bad in their mother tongue... these are pretty simple, i can't believe our chinese has gotten so bad
Luckily Malaysian Chinese can able to speak their mother tongue fluently
I agree smh ...
I work with students from Japan, Korea, Germany, India, China, Indonesia etc etc. The parents are the ones who insisted to speak their mother tongue at home and only mother tongue. No English at home. Most of them are bilingual/ trilingual fluently. Some Singaporeans too. Unfortunately, only the real 'atas' profile ones, tries to preserve their mother tongue.
Most of the middle class/ lower class will try to act atas by speaking English /Singlish and thinks that English is the way to go. Can you imagine all the family members, friends and relatives are all with Chinese speaking background and speaks fluently, but when they talk to a young kid in the family, they auto switch to English /broken English (they tried to avoid Singlish, but didn't master proper English). In the end, the kid Mandarin Cmi, English 'half bucket'. What's with speaking in mother tongue? Feel low class/ less atas/ inferior or what? Then throw the task to the Chinese tutors when the child have free resources around them.
Speaking from a local Singaporean Chinese family, where my parents from kumpung don't speak English/ Singlish at home- Pure proper Mandarin cuz they don't know English (from Chinese school), won't jiapalang mix Mandarin and English in a sentence. So naturally we speak in proper sentences - meaning, won't add English to Chinese sentences or add Chinese words to English sentences.
Where did I learn my English? Proper English from school teachers. Got an A for O'levels and B for English, no tuition at all.
I'm fortunate to grow up with my grandparents who speaks pure Hokkien to me. Not like some grandparents trying to follow the trend of their kids, totally don't speak dialect or mix Chinese and broken English. - honestly, some young parents think it's low class for the little kids to learn dialect and looked down on it. Sadly, the grandparents played along, thinking that they should have better English environment and by speaking more 'English' (broken English) helps the grandchildren. Grasping one more language = the ability to help or reach out to one more community. When I volunteered at an old folks home with other peers, they were nice, but couldn't understand well even with simple words like water when the elderly asked for it.
At the end of the day, I received decent command of Mandarin, English and Hokkien. Singlish, it's just a natural what.... Don't even need to learn it specially lah.
Was chosen and outstationed to Shanghai as I was bilingual pretty fluently as compared to my colleagues of similar profile/or even when I'm a junior at work. Got chosen largely due to my command of Mandarin- need to do training in Mandarin with professional lingos- I seem to be the one that need the least effort to groom for this area wise.
In China, I met a local Fujian person and he was surprised that as a Singaporean, I can hold a conversation with him in Hokkien! Not even his local colleagues from Shanghai or Nanjing could do that as they have their own set of dialect.
How much can you pass down to your next generation? In school, only 10% of the entire year x 10years is taught in Mandarin, in Chinese class. 90% of their awake time is in English/ Singlish. For parents who make effort to preserve mother tongue, at least push it to a 30% of their time, for sure, the kid will definitely perform much better than the people in the video.
Especially those who can speak proper mother tongue, I highly encourage to carry the practice of speaking in mother tongue with your child. I have elite Indian parents from India asking if I teach my class in Chinese hor.... Don't complain why big companies don't choose locals. Ask what we lack and lose out in this global market lor.
Btw, with my A in Singapore Chinese standard, I sounded like a primary school level in China. So... These people just lost a big pie and a bunch of opportunities. 1 language = 1 more market.
I don't know why the young kids are 'proud' for being not good in their mother tongue, but proud that they know English- the more 'atas language'? My colleagues of other races are having the same complain that they have to send their kids to tutors for Malay and Tamil, saying how poor they are in their mother tongue. Hello??? How to be good when their own mother don't speak mother tongue to the kids? Poor kids. Kanna blamed and pressured for problems that are not truly their fault.
Come on lah... How bad can mother tongue go as compared to broken English. Talking about those who can speak proper mother tongue but choose not to speak ones...
Singaporean chinese still better than chinese indonesian, most of us can't speak chinese at all, i myself as a chinese indonesian only speak a little, actually it's so embarassing, we have at least should learn our real language(chinese).. but we have a reason why this is happened in indonesia.. but some of us still speak our dialect like hokkien, canton, hakka, etc at home even thought not fluent in mandarin chinese
@@ignatios6393 the fact is that Chinese is part of major exam and that shows the importance of it in a certain level. But many people dropped the subject unfortunately.
If a language is your mother tongue it means your parents spoke to you in that language from young, so everyone can speak their mother tongue.
Singaporeans' lack in proficiency in the language is a result of the lack of a chinese speaking environment in school, work and probably home where the main language used is still English. It is generally also widely acceptable in our society to use language interchangeably to express ourselves. Unless we are expected to use Chinese and with good consistency to converse at work, it will always be a challenge to keep up with the Chinese speaking cities in the world. Practice makes perfect!
塑料袋 (sù liào dài),"塑” for standard pinyin is (sù liào dài),for daily life, "su" or "suo" are acceptable from my understanding 😃 any wrong please correct me☺️
I think “suo“ is more to taiwanese mandarin pronounciation if not wrong :))
I miss dining in...
Owo A wild Ray Mak appears
2
We all feel that, Sabar je lah bro....
@sacred warrior ➕1😂😂
Hey bro, you're here too! 到处都看到你的留言啊!
I know several words mandarin. Still learning with my wo de popo.. Ta shi zhoungguoren.. Wo bu shi huaren
wah seh bro its a QUADRUPLE WIN. watch your channel can also learn Chinese
As a Taiwanese, i just wanna ask that is it really true that in Singapore, people now usually don't speak their mother tongue???? Kinda shock for me
Mandarin is not our mother tongue per se, but other sinitic languages like Hokkien, Cantonese, teochew. Singapore's Lingua franca is English, mandarin education is simply forced on us by virtue of us being ethnically Chinese. It's nothing to be proud of
Also, teachers don't really teach conversational Chinese, more of "academic" Chinese? They're quite restricted to tests and school settings. I always found it a pity because most of us don't even know the names of simple everyday things like food ingredients
@@qoenntrell thank you for this message. There is indeed no shame in being less proficient in Mandarin. I feel more ashamed that I can't even speak my own dialect, Hainanese.
There is a lesser need to actually have the ability to be able to converse fully in mandarin. In most cases, conversing in basic Mandarin + English words is usually enough for another party to understand e.g. if you want straw, most people that I know would just say "Aunty/Uncle, 我要 straw" to food store owners. Personally, the only times that I use Mandarin is only when I converse with family/relatives and when I go out to converse with store owners e.g. buying food. Workplaces in Singapore mostly use English since English is recognized as like the main language to converse between different races and also in school/university lessons are usually taught in English except mother tongue lessons (some mother tongue teachers in my secondary school also incorporate english words when they teach so that students can understand them better). If you go out to hawker centre/malls, most store owners (even older generation) knows at least basic english or enough english to get customer orders/payment and have English names for food items. 99% food stores in singapore are labelled with numbers for each menu item so if your Mandarin is really bad, you can just simply say the menu item number in Mandarin or just point to the menu item picture. Delivery apps now with pickup/delivery options are quite common now so you do not even need to converse with store owners. So there is really a lesser need to use mother tongue these days.
Fun fact:a country in asia+chinese, saying chinnese is hard???
There are a few of errors in Chinese subtitles......
I believe in the future, most Singaporean Chinese parents will instead wanna greatly improve their kids Mandarin as China is getting more dominant will be much more so in future. So a great prospect for future will be working for Chinese firms or serving Chinese massive and affluent market. Their children's Mandarin will be laughed at when they are ethnic Chinese themselves and even are of majority race in their country, if they still have current level of Mandarin fluency.
Most of us Singaporean Chinese actually hail from the southern part of China, where Mandarin was originally NOT the lingua franca of the region.
Our true mother tongue languages are actually Hokkien 福建閩南話, Teochew 潮州(汕)話, Cantonese 廣東話/粵語 and all the other 'dialects' around. And in case you wonder why I included the inverted commas, that's because the difference between Hokkien and Mandarin, from a linguistic p.o.v, allows them to be considered distinct languages
It is not shameless if one of us can't speak Mandarin 官話 well, a borrowed Northern Chinese language. It is shameless that we have lost touch with our "dialects" because of Mandarin's political dominance.
@@goldkwi You don't have to explain to them because they won't listen to you. They just drop their Mandarin propaganda and go, whining about how Singaporeans are so bad at their designated "mother tongue" while deliberately ignoring the fact that Mandarin have never been Singaporean Chinese's real mother tongue. They collectively shame those who don't speak mandarin like a native twisted-tongued Northern Chinese, who historically have never had any contact with Singapore, with demeaning comments (your chinese embarrassing blahblah, china big market blahblah...) in order to perpetuate their wishful mandarin superiority.
10:37 goreng pisang ❌
Pisang goreng✅
Spot on!
Is that tampines hub?
Actually the ambassador on the right side speaks pretty decent mandarin as well based on his open ended responses but I think many attention goes to the uncle and half German guy. 我的个人看法是考查名词不一定能精准地反映出掌握华语的真实水平,而是要看他是否能以通顺的句子,并适当的运用关联词来持续一个对话。The irony thing is as much as our conversational Chinese standard dropping, the requirement of local oral examination levels up. Not only they are required to narrate the video content fully, but also to use good phrases 俗语+好词好句 to score.
As a malaysian chinese. I cant believe that singaporean chinese is not that fluent in their mother launguage like my cousin in singapore
FYI, container in Chinese = 容器
集装箱!哈哈哈哈
when i heard container i immediately think of bento and translate it to 便当 haha
@@iamjaydennn This is a rather general term for food container and is quite commonly used in Taiwan and China. It somehow doesn’t click with Singaporeans.
this thomas is from Wah banana right?
I’m quite shocked that they struggle to translate leh. These are very basic questions
I am shocked at singapore chinese speaking chinese in their mother tounge after watching this clip.
Yuppp luckily I'm a Malaysian.... every Chinese speak fluent mandarin
@@gabrielliong8601 I am embrass as a Singaporean prankana to be listening to this. Smack head....
Where is the uncle or hawker come from?
Not all Malaysians can speak Chinese lah. Those that went to Chinese schools speak Chinese whereas those that went to English schools struggle with their Chinese and possibly not even as good as these Singaporeans in this video.
No offence. But girl in yellow maybe not able to talk in Chinese but also very limited talking in English in sentences as well???
I got so annoyed watching her
I came from mainland China and accidentally saw this video. Surprised that the Chinese level of the younger generation in Singapore is so...
Bruh what do you expect from them most of them already accepted english as their mother tongue ever since Lee kuan yew started language policy😂 still i count it pretty good and enough to call them as bilingual comparing to my countrymen. And it's really hard for children to learn multiple language
@@deadpool113 Hahaha, maybe I am too naive. I was taught by a teacher from primary school geography class that Singapore is a Chinese people account for 70% country. Then I suddenly found out that the Chinese in Singapore can no longer speak Chinese. It is quite shocking. Hhh
@@hangli9419 Yeah i reckon it's more than 75%. You can easily call sg as a gigantic chinatown but the thing is it's an extremely multiethnic society. I was merely a foreigner student from Korea and i was an outsider but i met and learnt how diverse their history and ppl are.
Back in early 20th century the society was too fragmented. You may heard of Fujian people. The hokkiens. Even they were the most populated ppl in sg there were malay, tamil, eurasian biracials, javanese, british, arab, peranakan, etc... oh don't forget all those chinese ppl's grp shattered by their region. chinese settlers didn't have bond to each others they treated each others as rivals. But ever since China was unified by the power of the nationalist party, mainland wanted to take control of singaporeans. So they wanted chinese singaporean to be one nation and loyal to the republic. One method for that was teaching mandarin. The republic's policy was somewhat against the regional grp's benefit. It grew up the patriotism and nationlism as 'chinese' but each chinese groups should gave up the benefit and independency of their community. And after ww2 threat of japan ignited chinese nationalism but also it realized them the fragility of mainland. After china was conquered by communists, they gave up their kinship and loyal to china. That's how they became 'singaporean' nowadays. And the leaders of sp wanted to unite the country into one nation. The language was really matter. Lee kuan yew was different from all those previous chinese leaders who wanted to prioritize chinese. He looked ahead and found they need to unite every of their ppl to lead that small country. So he suggested english as official and general language to communicate with every ethnics of ppl.
So that is the dark side of the unification policy. The more they wanna unify each people the more they forgetting their root.
@@hangli9419 新加坡華人報導
其一,我們本地華人大致上都能聽懂中文,說跟寫的水平則有一些掌握得非常好,有的真的夠爛。(我的算中等以上)
其二,我們真正母語並非普通話,而是我們祖先南方的‘’方言“。(閩語/粵語等)。可惜,我們年輕人很少會說方言了。
Why so many negative comments here. I am malaysian btw. Hope this comments not come from Malaysians. Those words that they ask is hard and “uncommonly”use by majority of people.
1. Straw = 吸管
2. Hawker Centre = 小販中心
3. Container = 飯盒 / 外賣盒 / 打包盒
4. Plastic bag = 塑料袋 ( Suo Liao Dai ), the German guy is correct 👍
5. Reusable bag = 環保袋 / 循環袋
正确答案:Plastic bag = 塑料袋 su liao dai 不是suo
@@veronham61 👍🏻
Really ?? How come chinese don't know how to speak mandarin? Does singapore don't teach chinese subject in school ?
I can hear sound of Chinese Teachers coughing blood
Heart bleeding lah
Chinese is biggest ethnicity in Singapore follow by Malay (2nd) and Indian (3rd)
看完了这个视频 我还真的脸红了,感觉好可惜今天的新加坡人的中文程度比我想象中低好多。🤧
新加坡的中文水平会被大马人笑翻。在大马连幼儿园的小孩儿都说得比他们流利多了。
singaporeans said 'tapowing'. Also in malaysia we said tapaw
Recommend everyone learn Chinese include Malay and Indian. Becos it will benefits you and an advantage for your career. Especially Malay and Indian becos your Chinese client in China will be very impressed and more willing to close the deal with you.
If one can knows English and Chinese well one can do business or deal with both the west and the east super power.
But the truth is that Singaporeans can‘t speak either English or Chinese well.
@@jutea9858 where u from?
@@jutea9858 where u from?
@@Jack-hy2ki China, of course, but I went to school in the US, so I can recognize the Singaporean accent.
@@Jack-hy2ki But you are right, the accent doesn't matter, the average Singaporean does have a language advantage over the average Chinese or American.
Learning new words here is fun
I also learn something, liked and subscribed and opened the notification
Why don't make a video an ask Eurasians how good they are at Chinese and Malay even though it's not their mother tongue lol I'm Eurasian and I speak mandarin Cantonese and hokkien.even though I'm only quarter Chinese. Good video by the way
y'all know tht when he said xiao as hint I was like ohhh that rlly helpsss
Those 3 mans got Lord skilled Mandarin 🙏🙏🙏🙏 and the Uncle is the God
In Taiwan we say straw= 吸管、container = 保鮮盒(保鲜盒)、plastic bag =塑膠袋(塑胶袋)、reusable bag= 環保袋(环保袋)
水草
In Singapore- straw- 水草
container - 盒子
plastic bag - 纸带, plastic long
recycle bag