男友太凶猛1v1高h,大地资源在线资源免费观看 ,人妻少妇精品视频二区,极度sm残忍bdsm变态

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Lifestyle

That's that, or more like nage, nage

By Patrick Whiteley ( China Daily ) Updated: 2007-01-31 09:00:57
Chinese don't utter "um", when they are lost for words, they say "nage". "Nage" means "that" and is pronounced nay-gur. I work in a busy Chinese office and the sound of nage sings in the air. Almost every conversation starts with nage this or nage that (I mean nage). Someone rushes over to a co-worker with important business, leans over the work cubicle and it's take that (I mean nage).

If you have just arrived in China, start saying nage now. You can sound like a local with a few words. I know about 300 Chinese words, but by strategically inserting nage I can very sneakily double my vocabulary. It impresses my visiting friends.

I can tell a taxi driver the place I want to go and pepper the sentence with nage, and my mates say: "Wow, how about that! You can really speak Chinese."

I normally pad out the sentence with a preamble so the taxi driver can tune into my poor pronunciation.

"I can speak Chinese a little, but I don't speak well " But if I insert nage it becomes twice as long. "Nage, nage, wo hui shuo .. nage, nage ... (Um, um, I can speak, um, um) nage, nage ... yidian ... (um, um, a little) nage ... putonghua ... nage (um Chinese um).

My friends think I'm the real deal, unlike the taxi driver who rolls his eyes and sees through my scam.

I have an American friend who has taken nage to a new level. He speaks good Chinese, and like everybody else, starts a sentence with nage. But when he uses it like I use "um" he sounds like a horse. Naaaayyyyyyyyyy ge.

We all know Chinese is a tough language and scientists have recently discovered why. Putonghua actually tricks the brain. Researchers have found the brain first recognizes Chinese words as music and sends the sound to its right side, or the creative part, for processing. Within a nanosecond, the brain realizes the sound is a language and moves it to the left side for better analysis.

Therefore, it is a scientific fact that the Chinese language actually makes the brain say um (I mean nage).

Um is actually a word. "Exclamation: Expressing hesitation in speech", says the Oxford American and was first recorded in English about 400 years ago. A lot of folks have been um-ing along nicely ever since.

My former editor is a very smart fellow, a witty writer and is the biggest um man on this side of Timbuktu. In his three-minute, rev-up-the-troops speeches, he usually says um at least 20 times. "Um ... I just want to say ... um ... the level of commitment and dedication ... um ... I have seen over the past week .. um .. has been nothing short of sensational ... um, um, um."

A mate of mine bet me a coffee that my old boss would hit 32 ums during a farewell speech for a popular colleague. He was out by four. Our editor um-ed an incredible 36 times.

When I left for China, the editor wished me well and I clearly remember his farewell. "Um, that's that." So what my boss really meant to say was nage, nage, nage.


(China Daily 01/31/2007 page20)

Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 伊宁县| 兴安县| 东明县| 开封市| 宁南县| 镇雄县| 仙居县| 奉化市| 治县。| 九龙坡区| 且末县| 额济纳旗| 富民县| 托克逊县| 家居| 元氏县| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 桐城市| 金昌市| 安宁市| 桂平市| 萨嘎县| 雷山县| 永兴县| 湛江市| 泗水县| 新干县| 朝阳市| 阳高县| 兴隆县| 前郭尔| 渭南市| 盐亭县| 正阳县| 苏尼特右旗| 罗江县| 临汾市| 桂林市| 恩平市| 图片| 黄石市|