ICANN 46 - Beijing Playing Card Deck

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A special one-off Chinese language and culture card deck designed by ICANNWiki staff member Vivian Hua.

Mandarin Chinese & Pinyin

Chinese words are romanized throughout this deck with a system called pīnyīn (拼音), the official system of translating Chinese characters into Latin script in China, Taiwan, and Singapore. Below are some introductory ideas.

Mandarin's Four Accent Tones

  • First tone (Flat / High Level)
  • Second tone (Rising / High-Rising)
  • Third tone (Falling-Rising / Low)
  • Fourth tone (Falling / High-Falling)
  • Fifth tone (Neutral)

Pronunciation Guide

q As in “punch yourself” (no English equivalent)
x As in “push yourself” (no English equivalent)
zh With a sharpness found in words like “choke”
z Unaspirated c, like a mix of “suds” and “cats”
c Strongly aspirated c, as in “hats”
i As in “bee”, but if proceeded by z-, c-, s-, zh-, ch-, sh-, or r-, those sounds are extended
ei As in “hey”
ou As in “so”
ang As in the German “Angst”
ua Like “wa”
ui Like “wei”

Notable Chinese Dialects

Mandarin (官话 or guān huà) - 836 million Spoken in northern and southwestern China, and the official language of Singapore and Taiwan. When one refers to Putonghua or Chinese, one is generally referring to Mandarin.

Wu or Shanghainese (吴语 or wú yǔ) - 77 million Spoken in the provinces of Jiangsu and Zhejiang, and in the municipality of Shanghai. It also includes the Shanghai dialect and is sometimes considered a representative of all Wu dialects, though not all Wu dialects are mutually intelligible.

Yue or Cantonese (粤语 or yuè yǔ) - 71 million Spoken in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hong Kong, Macau, and parts of Southeast Asia. The term “Cantonese” may cover all the Yue dialects, including Taishanese, or specifically the Canton dialect of Guangzhou and Hong Kong. Not all Yue dialects are mutually intelligible.

Min languages (闽语 or mǐn yǔ) - 60 million Spoken in Fujian, Taiwan, and parts of Southeast Asia. The largest Min language is Hokkien, and its dialects are notably mutually intelligible.

Others include Xiang or Hunanese, Hakka, and Gan.

Greetings & Common Phrases

Chinese Characters Pinyin English Translation
你好 nǐ hǎo hello
wei hello (phone)
你好吗? nǐ hǎo ma? how are you?
你怎么样? nǐ zěnme yàng? what’s up?
我很好 wǒ hěn hǎo i am well
好久不见 hǎo jiǔ bù jiàn long time no see
我走了 wǒ zǒu le i am leaving
明天见 míng tiān jiàn see you tomorrow
再见 zài jiàn goodbye
拜拜 bài bài bye-bye

Introductions

Chinese Characters Pinyin English Translation
我的名字是... wǒ de míng zì shì my name is...
你叫什么名字? nǐ jiào shén mē míng zì? what is your name?
我是从 ____ 来得。 wǒ shì cóng ____ lái de i am from ____.
我很高兴认识你。 wǒ hěn gāo xìng rèn shi nǐ i am pleased to meet you.
我在 ____ 打工。 wǒ zài ____ dǎ gōng i work at ____.