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Beiträge: 10   Besucht von: 40 users
19.12.2013 - 06:47
 Utah
This is the equivalent to one of you making a song in "Chinese" where the lyrics are ching, chong, quang, etc. It's pretty interesting.

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The great questions of the day will not be settled by means of speeches and majority decisions but by iron and blood.
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19.12.2013 - 07:28
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19.12.2013 - 11:00
What?
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19.12.2013 - 14:48
I think its really interesting and no, an Anglo spoken vision of a Chinese song wouldn't say ching chong. I'ts a tonal language so that is the part that would be exaggerated. Quite highly.

It's fascinating to think what English sounds like to a foreign speaker. It's pretty easy to tell where a language comes from usually but it mixes together.

I love the intense OKs he gives.
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19.12.2013 - 15:13
>OLL RAIGHT
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19.12.2013 - 18:25
 Utah
Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 14:48

I think its really interesting and no, an Anglo spoken vision of a Chinese song wouldn't say ching chong. I'ts a tonal language so that is the part that would be exaggerated. Quite highly.


?
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The great questions of the day will not be settled by means of speeches and majority decisions but by iron and blood.
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19.12.2013 - 19:07
Geschrieben von Utah, 19.12.2013 at 18:25

Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 14:48

I think its really interesting and no, an Anglo spoken vision of a Chinese song wouldn't say ching chong. I'ts a tonal language so that is the part that would be exaggerated. Quite highly.


?


It is a tonal language. That means the pitch of your voice can change what the word means. It's why alot of East Asians have such odd accents when speaking English. Their tones arent use to remaining stable. We can talk and our pitch can change in subtle ways but the words remain the same. This isnt the case in many East Asian Languages. From what I know.
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19.12.2013 - 19:13
Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 19:07

Geschrieben von Utah, 19.12.2013 at 18:25

Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 14:48

I think its really interesting and no, an Anglo spoken vision of a Chinese song wouldn't say ching chong. I'ts a tonal language so that is the part that would be exaggerated. Quite highly.


?


It is a tonal language. That means the pitch of your voice can change what the word means. It's why alot of East Asians have such odd accents when speaking English. Their tones arent use to remaining stable. We can talk and our pitch can change in subtle ways but the words remain the same. This isnt the case in many East Asian Languages. From what I know.


>Claims Mandaru is tonal
>Cannot see the tone between Ching and Chong
>Ching
>Chong
>...
>Ching Chong Ching
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19.12.2013 - 23:07
Tik tok knows everything.
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It's not the end.

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20.12.2013 - 06:58
 Utah
Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 19:07

Geschrieben von Utah, 19.12.2013 at 18:25

Geschrieben von Tik-Tok, 19.12.2013 at 14:48

I think its really interesting and no, an Anglo spoken vision of a Chinese song wouldn't say ching chong. I'ts a tonal language so that is the part that would be exaggerated. Quite highly.


?


It is a tonal language. That means the pitch of your voice can change what the word means. It's why alot of East Asians have such odd accents when speaking English. Their tones arent use to remaining stable. We can talk and our pitch can change in subtle ways but the words remain the same. This isnt the case in many East Asian Languages. From what I know.


Oll Raight
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The great questions of the day will not be settled by means of speeches and majority decisions but by iron and blood.
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