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Cantonese vocabulary

I - Anon

You - Ernon

He - Qunong

We - A'an

You - Erli (nai)

They - Quli, grandma is called mother (ma)

Grandpa is called Gong

Dad is called Yue

Mom's name is Wu, Niang

Grandma - wow, also called "ah porphyry"

Grandpa - grandpa (uai)

Daughter - nan

Brother—Brother

The elder sister is called sister (ji)

The younger sister is called Nanmei

The baby is called Nimai, Mao Denei

The boys are called Shaolai and Housheng

The girls are called Nuner

The girls (to be married) are called Young Niangnong

The children are called Xiaoguai訚, Shuai Nong (i.e., bad, bad means small)

The old man is called Lao Chengren

The husband calls the man a troublemaker

The wife is called the girl's family. The daughter-in-law is called the bride

The school is called "Xuetang"

The shoes are called "鞈ha"

The socks are called "詩马"

Pants are called "興kuo"

Clothes are called "shirt" and Shang

Hands are called que

Feet are called 尻kao.

Garbage is called Lazarus. In Cantonese, it is called "乐色"

Bodhisattvas and gods are called "Old Buddha"

Rat is called "Old Thief"

Tiger is called "Old Disaster"

The rabbit is called "food steal"

The egg is called "ji zhe"

The monkey is called hozen kue xuan

The butt is called "buttocks". This is very similar to the ancient way of saying it.

The village chief calls "Chunjiang" in Hokkien and Japanese.

The hand is called "que".

The person is called Nong, Shanghai The word is "you".

Spitting is called saliva (Guangfeng is pronounced as sàn).

Spitting is called - pì tì. Drooling - Léi sàn (salivation)

p>

The pronunciation of chopsticks - jiě is the ancient Chinese character "箸".

The testicle is called prion (lan ze)

The male organ is called 朘 (zuai)

The sun---hot head moon--moonlight right hand--- Shun Que (que) left hand --- rebellious Que (que) kitchen knife --- white knife

Knee --- cat head soul --- soul table -- table stool --- Hu stool Ning broom --- tool scissors --- high shear window --- window tray toilet --- Maosi quilt --- iron cover - soup cover caterpillar --- wood spicy pit neck --- neck shank Nose---head and armpit---limbs and arms--face and ears---During the day, it is called "Tianguang", Naijiang (nai jiang)

In the morning, it is called Shuai (handsome character) When reading, remove the pronunciation of the tongue)

The day called "嘚" at noon is called "deng nen" (deng nen)

The afternoon call "嘚巴"

The evening call "Yanghui"

This year is called "Guan Nian"

Last year, it was called "Ken Nian"

Tomorrow, the year will be called "Ma Nian"

Today It’s called “Gri”

Yesterday it was called “What day”

Tomorrow is called “What day”

The day after tomorrow is called “Wu day”

After a while, call "Ge Shao"

Immediately, immediately call "Majiang", and when eating, call "Zefan"

Lie down---pull down

Pour tea-- Spill the tea sa zhua

Hide---Hide up

Ignore him---disdain him (disdain him)

Rain-fall Rain

Snowing - falling snow

Lightning - flashing huea xian

The snow has melted - the snow has closed

Have breakfast - -Zhao Tianguang

Eat lunch---Zhao Dingna

Eat dinner---Zhao Yanghui

Eat late night snack--Zhayaxiao

I dropped something - what's up?

Play--play

Bring it--Ari

Go home--Kegui,豱(duen) grams

Come back---Duen

Go back--Duen gram

Raise pigs--the clock pig split--the scraping book is dazzling- - The eyes are brightened - the strips are squinting - the Shao eyes are showing off their seniority - the old partition "praises" in Guangfeng dialect - beautiful, good, great, awesome, good-looking...

Guangfeng dialect" "Cowardly" - ugly, bad, bad, incompetent, ugly,...

Beautiful---clean, handsome, smart

Lively---noisy and immoral---- I hate being a singer---the eyes are downcast---falling back to the past

very thick--thick and black--the black and white are very small--the decline is very soft--Mi Mi Soft

Very heavy---Ding Ding is very hot---Boiling is very strong--Strong is very itchy--Ningma itchy

Very hard--- Gala hard and a mess - Pengchacha is very thin - Keshou is quick to do things - Jituo is slow to do things - the push board is very bad - Mo Shi is very good - praise is very reluctant - Ge Shengman Competent - a good guy is cunning - a thief

Usage of "very": smelly, sour, spicy, bitter, wet, sweet, salty, cold, boiling

5. What do adverbs do--Zhaoxi?

Why--Ningzang

Not--Mojie

What do they do? --Who is it?--Zhaonong

Where—guess it

Lies—ye said

Down below—down bottom

Top—upper bottom 1—yeih

2—liang

3—san

4—xi

5— —ngu

6——leh

7——tsheh

8——pah

9——kü

10——zΛh

20——Twenty

30——

Thirty (ten)

One——箇来

One hundred——箇百

One thousand——箇千

One Wan - the speech of Guangfeng people is called "Yue Shi".

In Guangfeng dialect, it is called "嬲niao3" or "drop dei 1" to describe a person who is very troublesome. There is no "I love you" in Guangfeng dialect, but just "happy erhun hi en"

The old man said to his guests "Ke, how easy it is"

How much is it? In Cantonese it is called "How much is gai du jian"

The word table in Mandarin is in Guangfeng dialect The middle name is: "Dapan"

If you say a man is a sissy, you call him a "female home tune"

Guangfeng calls him "anti-gunong", a rebellious person/people who do it against him. In Cantonese, it is called Fanguzai.

The ancestor worship service is called "Tai Gong Tai Po", which means "Tai Kao, Tai Concubine", which has different meanings from Chinese characters. "曰" (to speak), "囥" (to hide), "忿" (twenty), "笕" (pot), "福" (不), "奥" (to eat). Most of the roots are derived from "ru/er" and "qu (qu)". Singular personal markers mostly evolved from "Nong" (人) in ancient Jiangdong dialect. Plural personal markers are diverse, and most of them can be traced back to the same origin. The source form [ta?] or [ti] (compare: Cantonese "勋"). The Mandarin "stand" (stand) and "zai" are used alone, while Wu dialect still uses "standing" to express both attributive and possessive meanings. Structural particles and commonly used quantifiers have the same shape as the modal particles of declarative sentences, and can be traced back to the homologous forms (equivalent to "的" and "ge" in Mandarin, which are more redundant than "的" in Mandarin at the end of declarative sentences) . The little bully is called Laotouhuang (Emperor Laoer)

Don’t call him Fu Lao or Mo Ge

If you don’t call him Mo Yu, just call him Tsui. Zuibedong

The nose is called Jia Mode

The right hand is called Xiong Tuque (meaning a straight limb hand)

The left hand is called Ban Tuque (meaning rebel) Limbs and hands)

The shoulder is called shoulder head

The kitchen is called Zou dei2 (that is, the kitchen door head)

The egg is called gi ze

The cockroach is called Zi?

Where can I go and be called Kehelie (also called Kehelie)

Where can I go and be called Kehelie (kehelie)

Suffering and suffering (i.e. Even)

If you can’t say it, don’t say it’s Freefrou.

If you’re sweating profusely, you’re called Hunda Dada (i.e., sweat drip). There is a special saying in Guangfeng dialect for children. Enlightenment and simple communication terms are conducive to children's cognitive identification, such as:

Animals are generally used as onomatopoeia: Jigugu (chicken), Guguzai (chicken), Aowu (tiger), cow Ma (cow), Hu Hu (sleep), Ah Hei (it hurts), Xi Xi (pee), Om Om (defecation), etc.

Objects are generally used as redundant words: Fanfan (eat), Nei (sucking milk), Zaizai (goodbye), Jijiji (little feet), Queque (little hands), Baobao (steamed buns), etc.

Others: Baixu (no more, finished), Xi Ze (want to eat) and so on.