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What does diced beans mean?
The meaning of "diced beans" generally refers to children.

Alias of Douding: the names of children such as Xiluzai, Xiwenzai and Shannon.

Pronunciation is suitable for regions: Guangdong, Guangxi, Hong Kong, Macao and overseas Cantonese regions.

Expand knowledge of Cantonese;

Introduction:

Cantonese, also known as Cantonese and Guangfu dialect, is commonly known as vernacular, and is called Tang dialect overseas. It is one of the seven dialects of Sino-Tibetan tonal language and Chinese, and it is also the mother tongue of Guangfu people of Han nationality.

Cantonese originated from elegant words in the ancient Central Plains, and has a complete set of nine tones and six tones, which perfectly retains the characteristics of ancient Chinese. Cantonese is distributed in the Pearl River Delta and widely used in Chinese communities in China, such as Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Hong Kong, Macau, North America, Britain, Europe and Australia, New Zealand, Christmas Island, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam. Among the nearly 80 million local people in Guangdong Province, the core area of Cantonese, nearly 40 million people speak Cantonese, and the number of people who speak Cantonese in the world is about 70 million.

Origin:

The name of Cantonese comes from the "Nanyue State" in the ancient Lingnan area of China (Hanshu as "Nanyue State"), which is a general term. It is also called "vernacular" and "Cantonese" among the people, and "Tang dialect" in Chinatown in the United States. The two common names "Guangfu Dialect" and "Provincial Dialect" specifically refer to Cantonese in the old guangzhou fu area (now Guangzhou and its surrounding Nanfanshun area), Hong Kong, Macao, Wuzhou and Hezhou, which are smaller than the concept of "vernacular" and are generally called "Cantonese". [2]?

In ancient times, "Yue" and "Yue" were interchangeable words. In pre-Qin ancient books, the ethnic groups south of the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River are often referred to as "Yue", while in literature they are called Baiyue, Baiyue and Zhu Yue, including "wuyue" (southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang), "Fujian" and "Yangyue" (Jiangxi and Hunan). Since the Ming and Qing Dynasties, these two words have different meanings. The former is mostly used in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Wu-speaking areas, while the latter is mostly used in Lingnan and Guangdong areas, which has long been a general term for Lingnan areas. Historically, Guangdong and Guangxi were called "Guangdong", Guangdong was "East Guangdong" and Guangxi was "West Guangdong". It was not until the Republic of China that the scope of "Guangdong" gradually narrowed and was used as the abbreviation of Guangdong Province. Therefore, in different historical periods, "Guangdong" can be divided into broad sense (Lingnan) and narrow sense (only Guangdong Province). "East Guangdong" and "West Guangdong" have different reference ranges in different historical periods. The origin and maturity of Cantonese are far before the Spring Equinox of Song Dynasty in Guangdong and Guangxi. Therefore, as far as history and culture are concerned, "Cantonese" is actually "Lingnan language" in a broad sense, rather than "Cantonese" in particular. Just like English, not especially Britain. Cantonese is written in English and Yi in Japanese, commonly known as "Cantonese".

Since ancient times, Guangdong and Guangxi have been connected by mountains and rivers and people, and the two regions are inseparable. It was not until the Song Dynasty that it was divided into Guangdong and Guangxi. Cantonese was formed much earlier than Song Dynasty. Because of this, Cantonese is popular in Guangdong and Guangxi.

The tone of Cantonese is also very different from that of the north. There are six tones, one is clear, the other is clear, the third is clear, the fourth is turbid, the fifth is turbid, and the sixth is turbid. After that, it is the high entrance to promote sound clarity, the middle entrance to promote sound clarity and the low entrance to promote sound turbidity. Nine o'clock.

Common words:

I (I); You (you); Hey (he, she);

I (we); You (you); Hey (them, them); Person (person);

Abba, Laodou (Dad); Mommy, mom, grandma (mom); Brother, big brother (brother); Sister (sister); Sister (sister); Fine guy (younger brother); Sister in law; Grandpa (grandfather) Aunt and aunt (grandma); Grandpa (grandfather) Grandmother and mother-in-law (grandmother);

Department (Yes); Hey (in); Chen (think about it); Er (no); Um (this, this, that); Hey (come); Dai (speaking); None, none (none); Give (give); See (see); Bang (music); Please (find); Wear (wear); "clothing"; Enterprise (station); ? ? (that); Mi (don't); Point (how); It is a microphone (isn't it); Hey (things); Eat (eat); Drink (a drink); Edge (where); Edge (where); Edge (where); Speak (speak); Turn over (come back); Sleep (sleep); Degree (here); Day (another day, the next day); The first time (next time); Uh-huh, baa (what); What (what); How much (how much); Good (so good); Know and explain (why); Turn over and turn over the house (go home); Stay (plan); Neck thirst (thirst); Useless (useless); Hey, ga, ga, Jia (of); Lo, baa, bam, ya, la (modal particles); Agitate (get angry); Count (income); Stupid (cheated, cheated); Freedom (free); Well, stop (not just); Fixed system (or); Or (or); So (so); After that (then); Same (and); For, for; Boom (just); Good (very tired); Hey (hey); As if (as if); Talking to you (too lazy to talk to you); Joke (joke); Blow water (chatting, joking, bragging); Dress up (pretend garlic); Closed (worrying); Mie (don't do this); Mimi (isn't it); Fly the plane (pigeon); Relying on cats (not keeping promises); Nothing (for no reason); Panic (panic); In a flurry); Similarity (similarity; Prefer); Taboo (taboo; Taboo); Tell the truth.