Added: 3 years ago
From: b4dboyz
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  • kinda sound she is speaking every chinese dialect at once lol

  • I speak 河婆 Hakka.

  • This Hakka sounds different from the one my parents speak. The "io" sound in zin hiong sounds like a Teochew influence. Most of the diphthongs used in my dialect is very much similar to Cantonese

  • omg! I have no idea what she's saying, she sound like Cantonese or Mandarin, I'm Timorese Hakka, our Hakka have been mix Timorese and Portuguese.

  • @Portdude77

    this is Taiwanese Hakka... is difference from mine too...

    I speak Malaysian Hakka...

  • Great show but her Hakka is too polluted. My parents speak two dialects of Hakka. They would struggle listening to her Hakka.

  • What variant of Hakka is this? It sounds very different from the Hakka I speak!

  • How come Hakka seems to be a mixture of Yue and Mandarin, or with a pronunciation somewhere between Yue and Mandarin?

  • so is hakka a offshoot of the main language mandarin chinese(she speaks mando sometimes) like fujin and the other dialects from tainwan?

  • @eaglesgogirl None of the southern Yangtze chinese languages (Cantonese, Minnan/Taiwanese/Teochew, Hakka, Wu/Shanghainese, Gan/贛, Xiang/湘 is a offshoot of mandarin. All those languages have more common points together and toward ancient chinese (and with Korean/Japanese/vietnamese borrowings) than with Mandarin, wich is the Chinese language that has most derived from the original throught contacts with Mongol/Mandchu/Turkic languages of central Asia.

  • @qrsx66 so it means that the offshoot languages(minnan and the rest) are more related to ancient chinese and mandarin would be included in the off shoot of the related to the surrounding countries of china? i'm sorry but language origins are intresting but hard to understand.

  • @eaglesgogirl

    Hi, just to make this simply and clear, Mandarin is a language that came later, in the recent few hundred of years, because when the Northern Nomadic People ruled China, they had to learn Chinese to govern China especially the Manchus, so to a certain extent their talked Han Chinese in their own way, and Altaic languages tend to have curl tougn in them, therefore Beijing dialects have a huge tongue twisting involved.

  • @eaglesgogirl

    So basically, the very original Han CHinese language is not or no where near how it is like today (Mandarin). The original Han Chinese language is much more like what's remaining in Southern CHina today, such as Wu (Jiangnan regions) dialect, Min (Fujian and Taiwan) dialect, and Yue (Canton) dialect. Chinese civilization originated in the North around the Yellow River areas, when the Nomads took over the North a lot of Hans fled to the South.

  • @eaglesgogirl

    Therefore, the south today preserved much more ancient tones than the North. You can compare Korean, Japanese to South Dialects, you will find tons of similarities in the Han Chinese pronounciations because it was during that time when Japanese and Koreans extensively learned Chinese culture. Hope this helps!

  • @shishila thanks for you reply, i understand it better now Thanks

  • This teacher is adorable.

  • The girl is sooo Cute! (and funny too!). This show is great, where can I get more?

  • l am boldly to become may-be the first Hakka to drop the name of Hakka and identify myself as a Punti,Punti means local not as Hakka,Hakka means guest people.Are you supporting me to adopt a more accurate term"PUNTI" for myself and my next generations or clans

  • @endawie history is history, you can not change, if you changed it, it'll be meaningless. Especially of being your own heritage..

  • @endawie I think "Punti" refers to Cantonese speakers

  • yea...this is not really exact hakka pronunciation....close...but not exact..

  • different district's hakka will sound a little different. taiwan hakka vs china hakka will sound different

  • can anybody tell me? what kind of Hakka does Guangxi-Hakka people speak?

  • They speak 'ngai hua' for those staying in Luchuan (famous for Luchuan pig) and Buobai of southeast Guangxi, with slightly different accent mixing with the Guangxi baihua (Guangxi Cantonese); those in Hezhou speak with accent of the locals.

  • andersonhew you are either a bad apple or a rotten egg. shame on you ! If you have hakka blood in you, you should apologise to the teacher ! show some respect okay! She is only speaking taiwan Hakka which is Look Foong and Mexian mix. But all said she can easily understand Huizhou or Fui chew Hakka commonly found in Malaysia Okay! Don't be so shi ngiew yit pean kiang ( dead cow with head locked to one side!) ok lah!

  • amoy...nyi hao liang ohhh

  • 阿妹。。。尔好亮哦

  • nia mah chan ji pet kong ma kai lin, nia diu ke hakka hua lau lin nah ten, lau ma lai ah bi ya, nga tiu eh jin neh tong shan nah ten oh biao...ham kan chan

  • No wonder people think that Hakka people are lowly people. One good example is andersonchew. fist thing he has to say is to curse!! and end with curse!!..

  • OK! My bad. Btw, for now I think it's useless to argue which hakka is purer. I think we have to embrace the diversity of our beloved mother tongue. don't you agree?..

  • what kind of hakka is this!!!!

    Chinese in Sabah Malaysia speak better Hakka. Infact we still speak the purest form of hakka.

  • It's Taiwanese hakka, completely different, it cant be sure that you speak the purest form of hakka, there are so many different types since the hakkas immigrated to so many countries. for you to say that is ignorant, I could easily say the hakka I speak is more pure than yours.

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