North vs. South Chinese Accent 🇨🇳

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 755

  • @tashaonly
    @tashaonly 8 месяцев назад +613

    So Duolingo has been teaching me the Northern accent with all the ers at the end.

    • @cynthiacarmona3086
      @cynthiacarmona3086 7 месяцев назад +28

      Same
      Sad I THOUGHT I WAS LEARNING CANTONESE

    • @tashaonly
      @tashaonly 7 месяцев назад +40

      @@cynthiacarmona3086 Eeek. Shouldn't the language setting say Cantonese instead of Mandarin?!!

    • @cynthiacarmona3086
      @cynthiacarmona3086 7 месяцев назад

      @@tashaonly thb idk i googled it when I was first starting out and it said Cantonese, but NOW when I go to the Chinese page on duolingo it says Chinese Mandarin and so I looked it up on google AGAIN and it said it offered both but I looked everywhere on the app and I couldn’t find Cantonese ANYWHERE. ?????!!!!!!

    • @cynthiacarmona3086
      @cynthiacarmona3086 7 месяцев назад +11

      @@tashaonly I mean… I googled it when I first started out and it said Cantonese… but now when I look at the official page it says mandarin. So I looked it up AGAIN and it said it offers both.

    • @Nn.65juk
      @Nn.65juk 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@tashaonly
      I want to travel to china......
      I like kunnming and guangxi i would like to study in those provinces.

  • @jielly.melanie
    @jielly.melanie Год назад +4087

    north is basically a British accent but Chinese

    • @ghxsty_
      @ghxsty_ Год назад +471

      more like australian or even american with the ‘r’ sound

    • @Dqrk1700
      @Dqrk1700 Год назад +101

      Funny enough, My family roots actually go fron Inner Mongolia and Shenyang (so the North) and I was born in Sheffield (Also the North) Great Britain 😅

    • @stlouisix3
      @stlouisix3 Год назад +25

      @@Dqrk1700 I know people with the same combination of Chinese roots!!!

    • @Dqrk1700
      @Dqrk1700 Год назад +7

      @@Kataru210 No, Sheffield is on the central-north portion of the North-South divide

    • @DennisSullivan-om3oo
      @DennisSullivan-om3oo Год назад +15

      I would have thought the opposite because of British English in Hong Kong.

  • @ralphrodriguez9037
    @ralphrodriguez9037 6 месяцев назад +336

    I teach English to Chinese students, and I witnessed this phenomenon when a student was writing a sentence in English. He forgot the period at the end. I told the student, "You missed something." Immediately four of his classmates yelled "Dian, dian, dian!" Another ousted herself with her response, "Dianr, dianr, dianr!" The other classmates and I were amused. It is a cute accent.

    • @jessemc3
      @jessemc3 2 месяца назад +4

      Please do North Korean vs south Vietnamese accent

  • @dafnegodoyvazquez135
    @dafnegodoyvazquez135 Год назад +889

    Wow! the chinese northern accent sounds "angry" like the spanish north mexican accent 😂😂😂

    • @IDKwhattoputhere35
      @IDKwhattoputhere35 9 месяцев назад +5

      Yes, people use erization when they are angry. Even people from the south.

    • @user-yi4yg4bz4x
      @user-yi4yg4bz4x 7 месяцев назад +2

      maybe they are just always angry ..haha

    • @HeChuanVincent
      @HeChuanVincent 6 месяцев назад +12

      TRUE dude, I was born in the north of China, but grew up in the south. When I use north accent, it sounds very rough and bold, but when I speak Mandarin, it is close to the softness of the south accent.

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 6 месяцев назад +2

      ⁠​⁠@@HeChuanVincent Mandarin is Northern dialect, how could it get close to the southern accent?

    • @Qresmaidapa
      @Qresmaidapa 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@m.l7011 North - British accent
      South - American accent

  • @dustatdusk
    @dustatdusk 8 месяцев назад +686

    the girl from Beijing is speaking Beijing dialect but the girl from Fujian is just speaking standard putonghua, without any "southern accent". There are naturally many different "southern accents" not one. Someone whose mother tongue is Shanghainese would have a different accent than someone whose first language is Cantonese. If one really wants to get an idea of the Mandarin accent of those who speak Min languages (the Sinitic languages spoken in Fujian), they can just listen to Taiwanese mandarin. It's similar.

    • @SarahElisabethJoyal
      @SarahElisabethJoyal 5 месяцев назад +11

      I used to live in Taipei and when I put on the accent for my northern students they tell me they can't understand a thing 😂

    • @YummYakitori
      @YummYakitori 5 месяцев назад +25

      Indeed as a Singaporean of Min Nan descent (similar to Taiwanese) I do actually find our accents when speaking Mandarin to be closer. In comparison the “Fujian” girl in the video has a very standard Putonghua accent that is not typical for Fujianese at all, though to be fair I think Taiwanese and Singaporean Mandarin accents developed as a result of us learning from our predominantly Hokkien/Min Nan speaking parents and grandparents trying to speak Mandarin, whereas nowadays in China the Standard Putonghua accent is much more pervasive and it is increasingly common to find younger people in southern China who speak Putonghua without a “southern accent” at all.
      I think what’s very typically Fujian would be the softening of “zh”, “ch”, “sh” consonant and sometimes it even sounds similar to “z”, “c”, “s”. 有事 youshi may be pronounced yousi and 出门 chumen may be pronounced cumen

    • @worldtravel101
      @worldtravel101 4 месяца назад +4

      You don't sound like most fujian people I've met

    • @waynepolo6193
      @waynepolo6193 4 месяца назад +1

      I love deeply informative comments like this.

    • @pablomao6279
      @pablomao6279 4 месяца назад +6

      Being a chinese I agree❤

  • @linsen8890
    @linsen8890 8 месяцев назад +54

    I met a woman from China a few years ago. I speak some Mandarin, so I thought maybe I could chat with her a little. I asked her where she was from. She said, "I'm from Hujian province." I was so confused. Hujian? There's no province called Hujian! Finally I figured it out. She was from Fujian - but in southern China and Taiwan, a lot of people have a very soft accent, so the "F" sounds like an "H". There are so many dialects and accents in China that learning "standard" Mandarin in a class or from books and language software (like I did) gets you only maybe 20% of the way to actually understanding real, everyday Chinese the way it's actually spoken.

    • @kaohsiung99
      @kaohsiung99 6 месяцев назад +7

      My FIL is from China. MIL is from Taiwan. The point you made in your post reminded me of how confused I was about the 'f' vs. 'h' sounds at the beginning of words. It took me the second half of the 1990s's to figure out what was going on with that!!!!!!!

    • @James51879
      @James51879 4 месяца назад +6

      Your concern is mostly valid with late middle aged and senior people. Standard Mandarin has been an essential part of the 9-year compulsory education in China since 1986. Anyone born after 1980 should at least have some basic grasp of Standard Mandarin, if they went to school.

    • @leedonghae435
      @leedonghae435 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes that’s funny , some even joke that’s why fujianese can’t talk to Cantonese people because Cantonese has more ‘f’ sounds while fujianese (or Hokkien) does not contain any ‘f’ sound 😢

    • @yusraaslam0837
      @yusraaslam0837 Месяц назад

      Totally agree, the Chinese we studied is just 20%

    • @DragonDreamVNY
      @DragonDreamVNY 28 дней назад

      Even in Cantonese...one village to the next, they switch the F for H sound..😂
      Like "Sik Fan" Vs "Yak Han"
      Both to set rice 🍚
      Chow Fan Vs Chow An (fried rice)
      Let's not talk about Taishan-Hua... They are a strange one

  • @stlouisix3
    @stlouisix3 Год назад +338

    Beijing has even more of an errrrrrhua sound than most of the Northern regions though

    • @pizzacatred-velvet9952
      @pizzacatred-velvet9952 3 месяца назад +7

      yeah i could kinda tell with the northern girl that she pronounced "hu shuo" how ppl from beijing do

  • @mrmingsun
    @mrmingsun 5 месяцев назад +20

    Please note, this is slight differences within standard Mandarin. It is not northern or southern chinese languages or dialects.

  • @holliegamers9542
    @holliegamers9542 3 месяца назад +51

    Hushou..i only heard that word in cdrama 😂😂

  • @appa609
    @appa609 6 месяцев назад +109

    The "southern" accent here is basically formal Mandarin while the Beijing girl is showing some regionalism. Fujian people didn't speak Mandarin until about 50 years ago.

    • @qwmx
      @qwmx 5 месяцев назад +5

      I suspect that. It's nice to know that "true" mandarin didn't have the "r" accent and I was more likely learning the "correct" mandarin.

    • @appa609
      @appa609 5 месяцев назад +18

      @@qwmxWhat you mean by "true mandarin" is what Chinese people call 普通话 or "Common Chinese" and it's basically a standardized upper class Beijing dialect. The Beijing girl is speaking a more working class Beijing dialect.

    • @GavinLiuranium
      @GavinLiuranium 5 месяцев назад +6

      Yeah. “Southern accent” here is referring to speaking Mandarin 普通话 with a southern accent; speaking their own dialect/language would be a different comparison altogether

    • @ChaohsiangChen
      @ChaohsiangChen 4 месяца назад

      Standard Chinese wasn't invented until about 100 years ago. It is an adaptation of northern Chinese laguages in a way similar to how Hoch Deutche was formalized. IMHO, it was a travesty done by the pseudo intellectuals of early 20th century. Should have adopted Cantonese as national langage.

    • @DigitalAlligator
      @DigitalAlligator 4 месяца назад

      Not exactly. Even when the Fujian girl speak mandarin, you can still tell "Southern accent". By the way, Fujian and Taiwan are very close to each other, therefore, their accent is almost identical

  • @exercisethoughtsanddiscussions
    @exercisethoughtsanddiscussions Год назад +127

    Occasionally, I can hear the difference when I hear nearby college students speaking with each other. "er" sound, I suspect they are northern.

    • @MagicalKid
      @MagicalKid 10 месяцев назад +19

      You can tell even from the quality of their voices. Northern Chinese speak from their diaphragms, like an opera singer, whereas Southerners speak just from their throats.

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 6 месяцев назад +3

      Southern parts like Sichuan and Chongqing use “er” sound a lot too.

    • @cblyouhavetorun
      @cblyouhavetorun 3 месяца назад

      @@m.l7011 Most of the residents of Yunnan Guizhou and Sichuan migrated from the north in the early years, so their pronunciation is close to the northern dialect.

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 3 месяца назад

      @@cblyouhavetorun 并不是。中国有句话叫湖广填四川,四川由于战乱丧失了大部分古蜀人口,现在的四川人大部分是湖南江西移民,而不是北方人。云南和贵州更不用说了,基因测序也都是南方血统。中国南方省份,含较多北方血统的是江苏和浙江北部。

  • @pangkiatloh4555
    @pangkiatloh4555 3 месяца назад +3

    The Fujian Accent, is more like the Malaysian & Singapore Chinese Mandrin.

  • @rogerxu6248
    @rogerxu6248 6 месяцев назад +23

    This isnt reallt accurate as the girl sspeaking southern accent is just speaking standard mandarin, whereas the girl with the nothern accent is speaking a northern dialect in an informal matter, while it is interesting to see the difference between the two it might be misleading to compare them like this😅

    • @prasanth2601
      @prasanth2601 6 месяцев назад +1

      Is that so?

    • @halnicholas3791
      @halnicholas3791 3 месяца назад +1

      Right, Fujian girl just speaking plain vanilla Standard Chinese. In a real southern accent all the retroflex sounds (sh, zh, ch, r) just disappear.

  • @TheEarthRealm
    @TheEarthRealm 8 месяцев назад +25

    I prefer the sound of the southern accent, but I might be biased, as I'm learning Taiwanese Mandarin at the moment. 💁🏿‍♂️

    • @fruit4423
      @fruit4423 8 месяцев назад +7

      我是北方人,我也喜欢南方口音,特别是女生的,台湾女生口音是出名的甜,北方口音就很狂野。😂

    • @kathhqq7
      @kathhqq7 6 месяцев назад +2

      I like the southern accents like from Shanghai. But the Taiwanese accent sounds too slow and annoying, especially on women

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 6 месяцев назад +5

      There aint any southern accent in this video, the southern girl was speaking mandarin which a northern dialect. Many southern dialects are more sound like Thai and Vietnamese.

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@fruit4423这视频有哪怕一点南方口音吗?不就是标准普通话和北京南城话,都是北方方言。普通话成南方口音了?

    • @TheEarthRealm
      @TheEarthRealm 6 месяцев назад

      @@m.l7011 You're dumb. 😂 Taiwanese Mandarin sounds like the southern example given here. You can sit down.

  • @TheLightOI
    @TheLightOI 11 месяцев назад +124

    Being Chinese myself but living in Canada, the Northern Chinese accent is like French from Quebec compared to the one of Metropolitan France.

  • @8森8
    @8森8 5 дней назад

    Omg the retroflex final 😵‍💫🙃

  • @oisinmaccumhaill7037
    @oisinmaccumhaill7037 3 месяца назад +3

    This was like a really low budget rewind episode. I loved it.

  • @user-ih9yo2gz3w
    @user-ih9yo2gz3w 25 дней назад +1

    Nice norway T-Shirt-I’m half Norwegian and half Shanghainese btw.

  • @michaelmunno
    @michaelmunno 7 месяцев назад +8

    both of you have awesome clear English! thank you for this video, very cool. I can always hear a Bejing accent, so different than all the rest of those I have heard. Fuzhonese have their own accent which is quite different from Taipei mandarin, love to hear an example of those side by side also.

    • @generalnguyenngocloan1700
      @generalnguyenngocloan1700 7 месяцев назад +3

      It can drive you crazy, even the Fujianese have different dialects, they sound like different languages of their own.

    • @michaelmunno
      @michaelmunno 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@generalnguyenngocloan1700duya!

    • @kopokopo20
      @kopokopo20 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@generalnguyenngocloan1700 yeahh lmao my parents are from the same city in fujian and even their native tongues ("dialects") are completely different to each other

  • @channaichew3013
    @channaichew3013 3 месяца назад +3

    In Malaysia Singapore Taiwan, plenty of Hokkien (Minan) spoken on d streets..we love n must preserve our dialects!!
    Also Cantonese , in HongKong KL ,dont let them die out!

    • @dtan-215
      @dtan-215 Месяц назад

      I’m originally from the Philippines and I went to Quanzhou for the first time just last month. I was so happy to hear the Hokkien/minnan there sounded like the Hokkien spoken in the Philippines. A lot of people still speak it there if they’re originally from that region. It was a wonderful experience and I would go back again. You’re right, I hope it doesn’t disappear over time.

  • @Workerbee-zy5nx
    @Workerbee-zy5nx 4 месяца назад +4

    Ok, got cha, clear as mud.👌

  • @Eldorado66
    @Eldorado66 9 месяцев назад +46

    I like the southern accent better

  • @letsgowalk
    @letsgowalk Месяц назад +1

    I grew up only speaking Cantonese, Toisanese, and English, but the fourth language I learned was Spanish in HS.
    This is where I learned how to roll my R’s. When I learned Mandarin in my adulthood, the tongue rolling came easy. 😂

  • @cookiescream548
    @cookiescream548 Год назад +43

    Funny how Beijinger looks more like the average fujianese...and the fujianese looks more like Beijing ren

    • @anakitiktokwi2939
      @anakitiktokwi2939 Год назад

      Are you joking?

    • @LinLin_0308
      @LinLin_0308 11 месяцев назад

      Both are Chinese guy

    • @deleteme924
      @deleteme924 11 месяцев назад +1

      maybe just tan

    • @MagicalKid
      @MagicalKid 10 месяцев назад +3

      That's not true, the southerner actually looks like she could be from anywhere in Guangzhou or even Hong Kong

    • @skylargray455
      @skylargray455 9 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@anakitiktokwi2939no he's not. Many Northern Chinese are tall and elegant looking like the lady on the right and Southern Chinese tend to be usually rather smaller in stature and delicate in comparison just like the lady on the left. Of course there are exceptions to the case

  • @hexagonal69
    @hexagonal69 7 месяцев назад +23

    The Norwegian tshirt that the one from Beijing is wearing is so nice!

  • @CheukTheGreatestOfEverything
    @CheukTheGreatestOfEverything Год назад +21

    řřřřř for 北京 😂

    • @relaxationstation7374
      @relaxationstation7374 9 месяцев назад +2

      🤣Beijingers need the Rrrrr because it's Cold, as in Brrrrrrr!🤣

  • @user-lq3hi5zg6n
    @user-lq3hi5zg6n 16 дней назад +1

    As a Chinese, just look at the face, I saw the right side is north, the left side is south

    • @alexfine3105
      @alexfine3105 13 дней назад

      Beijing has people from all over China, so maybe the girl on the left side has parents originally from the south.

  • @mg6641
    @mg6641 Месяц назад +1

    As a person who spent around 20 years in China, I do confirm it.

  • @cmoneytheman
    @cmoneytheman Месяц назад

    Chinese is so complex in language.
    This isn’t accent differences; only its words are very interesting.
    I never knew when I was a kid, and the media always made it seem like China only had 1 language.
    Same way as the media for years always made it seem like Africa, where my ancestors are from only have 1 language, but it has multiple just like China and other countries.

  • @KinLee919
    @KinLee919 9 месяцев назад +11

    The other thing the beijinger like to do is dropping sounds. Like in good morning 早上好 zaoshanghao, they'll say zaoerrraor. 😅

    • @VSvishnusurvase
      @VSvishnusurvase 6 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂

    • @davidscottkrause1
      @davidscottkrause1 5 месяцев назад

      Wow, that's a big change!

    • @James51879
      @James51879 4 месяца назад

      No. There are rules to determine which words you can add the "er" to. In this case is "zao-er hao a" (早儿好啊), "zaoerrraor" is just incompetent pronunciation.

    • @halnicholas3791
      @halnicholas3791 3 месяца назад

      Yes, a lot more elision in northern Chinese

    • @channaichew3013
      @channaichew3013 3 месяца назад +2

      But..so..how does "Wo gao shu ni" (i tell u) become "Wo gao'r ni" in their northen Chinese accent ??

  • @purenupe1
    @purenupe1 5 месяцев назад +1

    This makes learning an inflection based language that much more difficult

    • @MagnumCarta
      @MagnumCarta 4 месяца назад +1

      My fiancee is Chinese and when I asked her if she'd help me get better at speaking Mandarin she said "don't bother"! xD

  • @generalnguyenngocloan1700
    @generalnguyenngocloan1700 7 месяцев назад +3

    My wife is from Luoyang, Henan and says their Mandarin is most perfect. I cannot speak Mandarin that good, but I know 100% when I hear Dongbei dialect, and it’s awesome to hear people from Harbin. 🐉👍🏻

  • @MaxBoomingHere
    @MaxBoomingHere 22 дня назад

    I've been learning textbook Chinese and have seen a mix of both whoch is interesting (出门 but also 好玩儿)

  • @jerlatti
    @jerlatti 12 дней назад

    Yes because so many people in Fujian speak standard Mandarin.

  • @pttimothys
    @pttimothys Год назад +48

    i like the husuo. 😍

    • @narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256
      @narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256 Год назад +1

      Idk what that word means. But I have a feeling I’ve heard of it before 😂

    • @izzyneubs
      @izzyneubs Год назад +8

      ​@@narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256 it means "nonsense" or "bullshit" haha! (胡说)

    • @narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256
      @narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256 Год назад

      @@izzyneubs thanks

    • @izzyneubs
      @izzyneubs Год назад

      @@narutoninjagoandtheflashar4256 no prob 👍

    • @romanr.301
      @romanr.301 11 месяцев назад +3

      It's a shortening of the Chinese idiom 胡说八道/胡說八道, which means "to speak nonsense."
      The Southern variation, 乱讲, means "to talk recklessly/wantonly"; 乱 put before a single-character verb just means to do that verb carelessly or halfheartedly (乱丢=to throw out carelessly; to litter).

  • @AdorbsxAriel
    @AdorbsxAriel 17 дней назад +1

    I guess i speak fluent south china chinese even tho i never speak chinese unless i get promised 100 dollars in cash:

  • @uboatism
    @uboatism 26 дней назад

    The last phrase gave her away 😂瞎说嘛儿

  • @astrawwberri
    @astrawwberri Год назад +55

    I'm from the south and I once had a Chinese teacher from the north. I JUST REALIZED THIS AND IT MAKES A LOT MORE SENSE.
    Now my Chinese is like if you slap Northern and Southern accent together and put in a buncha 'uh's

    • @AJK-a2j00k4
      @AJK-a2j00k4 Год назад +1

      don't southern chinese people know mandarin as it's china's national language and official language as well????

    • @nigellei8591
      @nigellei8591 Год назад +2

      @@AJK-a2j00k4 They are force to learn mandarin as a second language in elementary school up to high school. but only 1 hour per day. they speak their native language at home and everywhere else in their home town...even in government offices.

    • @sudonim7552
      @sudonim7552 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@nigellei8591 I am from Guangdong and Mandarin is widely used alongside Cantonese ("Canton" is just the British name for Guangdong), not some rare thing you learn in school and never use again. Idk what you're referring to. I hardly think it's "forced" at all.

    • @waij8261
      @waij8261 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@nigellei8591may i know what the native language at home they speak.

    • @MagicalKid
      @MagicalKid 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​​@@waij8261there are many regional languages, like Cantonese, Hokkien, Teochew, Hakka etc....kinda like the Italian languages (Sicilian, Neapolitan) where people still speak them regionally. But they actually do use Mandarin a lot as well on a day to day basis and not just one hour a day like what the reply above suggests.

  • @kawings
    @kawings 3 месяца назад +2

    meanwhile in a place even more southern than Fujian like guangdong and guangxi. The accent is even more thinner compared to northern china. The accent over there more mimic to vietnamese tones.

    • @雅君墨客-i9z
      @雅君墨客-i9z 3 месяца назад

      想個屁越南越南人機口音我們中國還是他聽出,越南的口音跟東南亞的尤其是老撾泰國那邊口音一樣

  • @peteyhy
    @peteyhy 4 месяца назад +2

    Further south in Singapore and Malaysia, we are closer to the southern accent but I feel we sounded more flat and monotonous. Beijing accent has its flair and both are unique.

  • @giveitupforbeabadoobee
    @giveitupforbeabadoobee 5 месяцев назад +1

    lol i’m learning Chinese in the Southern part of China but they use Northern textbook (BLCU). They teach Putonghua too, but i feel weird for using excessive 儿 at times 😂😂

  • @kenho-wr5ul2rh7m
    @kenho-wr5ul2rh7m 4 месяца назад +2

    as a southern, i hate rolling my tongue

  • @MauroLambrosini-ix4ge
    @MauroLambrosini-ix4ge 3 месяца назад

    ahahahahah i cracked when "bruh" appeared 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @NyashaKatena
    @NyashaKatena 2 месяца назад +1

    Nî zhen chou😂😂😂😂😂

  • @waynepolo6193
    @waynepolo6193 4 месяца назад +1

    Your last example ( 胡说 [húshuō] vs 乱讲 [luànjiǎng]) got me really interested in what makes them distinct, yet can both mean “BS.”
    Looking at the individual character components for context, ‘Hu’ can mean ‘mustache,’ or ‘whiskers,’ but it can also mean ‘non-Han individuals, or ‘Hu people.’
    “Luàn” (乱) on the other hand, can mean “riot,” or “disorder,” or “upheaval.” Looking even closer, its component characters mean “hidden tongues” when taken separately.
    So, a more “literal” interpretation for each one could be, respectively: “Hu-People Speak” and “Reckless/riotous speech.”
    Anyone with more knowledge of the etymology, please, I’d love to know your thoughts.

  • @Likar803
    @Likar803 2 месяца назад +1

    I have a friend from northern china that's why I want to learn nortgern Chinese

    • @U-qho
      @U-qho Месяц назад

      Northern is an accent.

  • @xelkim9666
    @xelkim9666 Год назад +20

    Invite me on i will show you hongkong mando accent🤣❤

  • @JenishGhale-gy9qh
    @JenishGhale-gy9qh 27 дней назад

    Love that girl from Beijing ❤️❤️❤️

  • @tvtvtfan3767
    @tvtvtfan3767 Год назад +5

    My family is from Malaysia so I guess that have a mixture of vocabulary from north and south China. They also know many dialects. Unfortunately I don’t because I want born don’t. I can for sure say be south more southern speaking Chinese. It’s much easier to understand southern Chinese accent

    • @MagicalKid
      @MagicalKid 10 месяцев назад

      Malaysians do not speak like people from the north, their ancestors come from the south so they are 100% more similar to southern mainlanders

    • @imhokkien
      @imhokkien 8 месяцев назад +1

      The Chinese ancestors in Malaysia all came from the South, so they resemble Southerners and speak more Southern languages

  • @jmm1233
    @jmm1233 11 месяцев назад +29

    thats amazing the north chinese sound very much like those yorkshire dialect

    • @oliverbacon8073
      @oliverbacon8073 9 месяцев назад

      Exactly xd

    • @Gy7vv7g8vgug8uv
      @Gy7vv7g8vgug8uv 8 месяцев назад

      What!!! I go to school in yorkshire but I'm northern chinese and I don't see any similarities 😭

    • @bitmelody2616
      @bitmelody2616 6 месяцев назад +1

      Not at all. Yorkshire is known for being very non-rhotic. The North sounds like an American accent

    • @Gy7vv7g8vgug8uv
      @Gy7vv7g8vgug8uv 6 месяцев назад

      @@bitmelody2616
      Northerners do not sound anything like americans 😭

    • @bitmelody2616
      @bitmelody2616 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Gy7vv7g8vgug8uv just checking, we're both talking about the North of China, not of England, right? Because northern Chinese heavy use of erhua makes it sound very American. But of course Yorkshire and American accents are a world apart.

  • @davidhamtaro
    @davidhamtaro 6 месяцев назад +2

    From James o’ Brian Mystery hour on London radio LBC, i learned that colder places have curled tongue accents and nasal tone due to the freezing cold.

    • @halnicholas3791
      @halnicholas3791 3 месяца назад

      Hmm, interesting. Never heard that before.

  • @ArisAzul
    @ArisAzul 8 месяцев назад +3

    This confused me like crazy when I first got to Taiwan, as their accent sounds more southern Chinese to me. 😊

    • @halnicholas3791
      @halnicholas3791 3 месяца назад

      Yeah, can be frustrating. Chinese is already a sound poor language, then the southern accent eliminates all the retroflex sounds, so there are even fewer sounds! But after a while you get used to it.

  • @janap.8455
    @janap.8455 8 дней назад

    LOL, I noticed I have the Southern accent, despite my university teaching me the Northern accent.

  • @tonydai782
    @tonydai782 7 месяцев назад +3

    Actual differences in southern pronunciation are that in thick southern accents, n and l are the same and zhi, chi, shi all become zi, ci, and si.

    • @hendywijaya3213
      @hendywijaya3213 4 месяца назад

      You're right.. My grandparents were from southern China, so they and my parents can't speak "er" also can't differentiate between zhi chi shi and Zi CI si, not to mention the zhe che ze ce she

    • @halnicholas3791
      @halnicholas3791 3 месяца назад

      Right. The southerner in the video is not speaking with that accent, she just speaks “textbook” standard Chinese.

  • @deekaysky
    @deekaysky 3 месяца назад

    I love learning Chinese then realizing it’s specific to the region I’m in and universal ahahaha

  • @Elior1030
    @Elior1030 2 месяца назад +2

    The south accent is the one we hear on movies often, I think.

    • @aoshi000
      @aoshi000 2 месяца назад

      Actually we usually hear the northern accent in movies from China as many famous actors are from Beijing. Unless you watch movies from Taiwan then it would totally be a southern accent.

    • @pavelvltchek1612
      @pavelvltchek1612 2 месяца назад +1

      Trust me bro there's no "south accent" shown in this video, only Beijing mandarin and standard putonghua

  • @vnlcully
    @vnlcully Месяц назад

    Which is more fancy? That’s what I’ll do

  • @DancingShiva788
    @DancingShiva788 7 месяцев назад

    You're making my head hurt... :D

  • @NewtonEinstein-rk3nq
    @NewtonEinstein-rk3nq 6 месяцев назад +2

    I usually watch Chinese dramad with my mom (she loves it, the best for her) and I noticed that Chinese sounds like English with that "r", but Beijing Chinese confirm it.
    It's interesting these kind of things.

  • @aoshi000
    @aoshi000 2 месяца назад

    Years ago i used to have trouble understanding my colleagues from Tianjin, not Beijing but still northern with a lot of er. I thought that er ending muddled many words, like photo is zhaopian, she would say zhaopianER, it would take me an extra second to decipher it. It sounds perhaps a bit like Scottish, while southern Chinese is more like English RP in a non rhotic way. But after you get used to it, northern accent is kinda fun and cute, it really comes down to the speaker. I visited Beijing about 10 years ago and boy did i have a hard time understanding their Mandarin. But regional accent could be strong anywhere too even in the southern provinces. China is vast just like the US, people speak different Chinese dialects/languages in addition to Mandarin in their regional accent. Growing up i used to prefer the clearer Taiwanese accent, but after watching more movies from China, i appreciate the standard putonghua accent more

  • @azncrombie4u
    @azncrombie4u Месяц назад

    When I watch Chinese movies i hear more of thr errrr 😂

  • @johntoscano2476
    @johntoscano2476 7 месяцев назад +2

    I’m from NY and I feel like most of the Chinese I’ve heard here is southern accent. I guess a lot of American Chinese are from
    Guangdong, Fujian etc, interesting

  • @DragonDreamVNY
    @DragonDreamVNY 28 дней назад

    Guongdong Mandarin.. there were viral videos of Louis Koo Tien Lok from HongKong (TVb and later film star) speaking terrible putonghua/guoYu 😂

  • @weddingvowsmanifesto3536
    @weddingvowsmanifesto3536 6 дней назад

    girl on right uses the received pronunciation.

  • @impromptu12
    @impromptu12 9 месяцев назад +5

    That's not southern accent, it's just standard "Mandarin"... Southern accent has more feature like lacking "r" and "-h" sound.

    • @intodust_asian_club
      @intodust_asian_club 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah exactly

    • @hbrant
      @hbrant 7 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed, Southern accent is Sichuanese. I didn't hear it in this video.

    • @m.l7011
      @m.l7011 6 месяцев назад

      No, southern part like Sichuan/Chongqing use a lot of “r” 😅

    • @allone4080
      @allone4080 4 месяца назад

      For fujian people we can pronounce s/sh z/zh properly 😂

  • @muhammadafifazzindani9667
    @muhammadafifazzindani9667 8 месяцев назад +2

    Your english tho 👌

  • @user-ni6sp4on4h
    @user-ni6sp4on4h Месяц назад

    My teacher said she was from Fulan Province. After she finished writing this word, I just realized that it was Hunan. 😂

  • @KM-hm3sw
    @KM-hm3sw 3 месяца назад

    Chinese is a broad term describing languages spoken by Han ethnic group. There are many different languages within Chinese , which are not mutually intelligible with each other. Such as Madarin, Cantonese, Hokkien etc.

  • @surveytestmoney2550
    @surveytestmoney2550 6 месяцев назад +2

    I like the *southern* accent better❤

  • @HorstChristophSchreiber
    @HorstChristophSchreiber 28 дней назад

    I like Fuzhou very much. I was there climbing the "drum mountain" gu shan

  • @jpvjr71
    @jpvjr71 2 месяца назад

    My family is from Eastern PA.
    They claim I don't speak English.
    I'm from Central PA.

  • @darbin2358
    @darbin2358 10 месяцев назад +4

    I prefer southern accent much more ❤

  • @cee_el
    @cee_el Месяц назад

    Southern accent is also very different if you find someone from Guangdong 😅

  • @worldspacechina
    @worldspacechina Месяц назад

    Those are not a matter accents, they are different in use of language/words. Accents are sounds and intonations, but here the differences are putting a 兒at the end of the words and also using different words to describe the same thing/action; just like boot and trunk, trousers and pants in Brit’s and American’s

  • @praszHUANG
    @praszHUANG 7 месяцев назад +1

    This one is important to understand and to be learned...

  • @PWapa65
    @PWapa65 3 месяца назад

    That húsūo 的轻声 was so intense! 😆👍 Why am I so bilingual though?! 😅

  • @Dragon34th
    @Dragon34th 3 месяца назад +2

    My teacher is from Beijing - when I told her I have a computer science degree she went: "Fei1 hua4 zhe hu2 shuo1. Computer science degree mei2 you3 le wo3 bu4 ben4 :) Then I had to confess I'm a post grad fashion designer.

  • @jeannedarc3440
    @jeannedarc3440 3 месяца назад +9

    Then... there's Cantonese

  • @user-luanquandasilaoshifu
    @user-luanquandasilaoshifu Месяц назад

    这个北京妞儿长得真可爱,圆圆的小脸儿,笑起来倍儿甜。

  • @tomtomas6980
    @tomtomas6980 4 месяца назад

    they are so cute goshhh!!

  • @kerrin6633
    @kerrin6633 6 месяцев назад

    This is so cute!! Thanks for sharing

  • @cmaven4762
    @cmaven4762 Месяц назад

    I think I like the sound of the r-intrusive dialect, but I'm more fluent in Southern Mandarin ... lol ...

  • @andengpintado7833
    @andengpintado7833 Месяц назад

    All i can see is how pretty they both aRe

  • @jianzheng2934
    @jianzheng2934 2 месяца назад

    I understand what you were saying and I speak Chinese

  • @ShiftyBlue02_
    @ShiftyBlue02_ 20 дней назад

    Thanks for telling me that my Chinese teacher is from the north! :D /s

  • @mashy712
    @mashy712 2 дня назад

    Norway shirt 🇳🇴

  • @bluestar2253
    @bluestar2253 2 месяца назад

    I remember the first time I met a dude from northern china, and I told him to slow down dude! Your eating part of our english words. For example, he would say "energg" instead of energy!

  • @Just4Growers
    @Just4Growers 7 месяцев назад

    Wow! Loved these insights. New subscriber.

  • @SchmulKrieger
    @SchmulKrieger Месяц назад

    The woman without Norway flag has European features.

  • @wmccinema
    @wmccinema 2 месяца назад

    I belong to an ethnic group in the northern Philippines and upon learning that China is diversely united with a lot of ethnic group, looking at their textiles. I got to say I love every cultures.

  • @It_Puts_The_Lotion_On_Its_Skin
    @It_Puts_The_Lotion_On_Its_Skin Месяц назад

    I remember I was in highschool, and these two Venezuelan girls of Chinese ancestry were speaking very loud Spanish and Chinese to each other. I yelled something at them in fake Chinese, and they were stunned. They said that I told them to shut up in Chinese with the perfect accent. Til this day, I don’t know if they were joking or being serious 🤷‍♂️.

  • @798081aa
    @798081aa 3 месяца назад

    That's just a local dialect 😂😂😂😂

    • @雅君墨客-i9z
      @雅君墨客-i9z 3 месяца назад

      不是的,這是地方的普通話要說方言的話是啊不同的

  • @10kalden59
    @10kalden59 17 дней назад

    Any video editor here? Could you tell me the names of the music used in this video?

  • @user-zt2yz9gf5e
    @user-zt2yz9gf5e Месяц назад

    Now I feel like I’m I. The middle

  • @PeaceIslandStudio
    @PeaceIslandStudio День назад

    Bro it’s very different accent in different provinces, I can’t understand some of them

  • @xxshining__stwarzzxx
    @xxshining__stwarzzxx 3 месяца назад +1

    im from harbin and i can confirm this is how we talk lol

  • @peterdaniel66
    @peterdaniel66 5 месяцев назад

    you guys are super cute!!

  • @YupuASMR
    @YupuASMR 4 месяца назад +1

    Im from beijin but I use both accents lol

  • @_JackNapier
    @_JackNapier Месяц назад

    nORth
    soUTH
    Piece of cake🃏✌️

  • @syntacticalcrab
    @syntacticalcrab 2 месяца назад

    A lost of the vocabulary part is very specifically Beijing! But it's on TV a lot so it's spread.