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#1
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Darkstar wrote:
Don't ask me why I need this. I do! It's a principle! :-) My guess is that you have a hot date with someone from Beijing and want to impress them. Try the tools at: http://babelfish.altavista.com http://www.mandarintools.com |
#2
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I asked my son, who speaks Mandarin. He said, "The only thing that comes to
mind immediately would be dzou kai. Which basically means 'get away'." "Darkstar" wrote in message om... Any zhongwen speaking ppl over here? How do you call out "Clear prop!" in Mandarin when you mean "Keep away from the prop -- I'm starting the engine." Used as a standard phrase when flying small planes (Cessna, YAK, etc). Don't ask me why I need this. I do! It's a principle! :-) |
#3
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On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 19:41:07 GMT, "Jon Woellhaf"
wrote: I asked my son, who speaks Mandarin. He said, "The only thing that comes to mind immediately would be dzou kai. Which basically means 'get away'." The problem is, the English doesn't make sense. We ought to be saying "Get away!" also. The Japanese army said "miwase, miswase!" which I think is turn, turn! But that wasn't to warn people off. That was to get a spin. (Normally they used a starter truck with an engine in back and a row projecting over the cab; the rod had a claw-like arrangement on the end, which engaged the propeller at the spinner,) all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com Expedition sailboat charters www.expeditionsail.com |
#4
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I asked my son, who speaks Mandarin. He said, "The only thing that comes
to mind immediately would be dzou kai. Which basically means 'get away'." Wouldn't the phrase have to include "Chop Chop" in it??? Grin |
#5
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![]() Paul Anton wrote: Wouldn't the phrase have to include "Chop Chop" in it??? Grin No, that's what happens if you *don't* yell "clear prop". :-) George Patterson If you want to know God's opinion of money, just look at the people he gives it to. |
#6
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Now that a half of the Google population can't sleep at night
wondering how the heck you say that goddamn "Clear prop!" in that goddamn Chinenese, I'm pleased to announce that a Taiwan military officer in the know told one of our agents in China it is "qing1 chang3" which basically means "Clear the area!" Our organization is currently verifying this information. NOTE TO OUR AGENTS ABROAD: the mass highjacking of Chinese airplanes is to take place on due date. |
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