Nanren888- 新西兰
Saying Chinese wrong (spoonerisms) A common error for native English speakers in speaking English is a spoonerism. A "spoonerism" in English is when you say it wrongly, by swapping first letters. "House & garden" is said "gouse & harden". The first sounds are swapped between words. This happens all the time, by accident when speaking. Usually you can just tell what they mean without thinking. A native Chinese speaker told me that spoonerisms never happen in Chinese. Even happen? Maybe a little like wanting to say Hen Re (很热) & saying "RenHe" by mistake, or dage (大哥)--> ga de Any comments?
2010年8月10日 07:05
回答 · 11
2
This mistake is rare in Chinese because English words are made up of letters but Chinese characters are made up of strokes!
2010年8月10日
1
sometimes we cannot distinguish between ‘L' and 'N'. for example we want to say "ni3"(你) but make a mistake to say "li3"(里) and some Cantonese might get involved in 'F' and 'H' like saying "hua"(花) instead of "fa"(发)
2010年8月15日
this is rare in China unless we speak too fast
2010年8月15日
The answer is yes! Of course yes! It never happen frequently in Chinese so many people may neglect it. But it do exist! I have encountered that for serveral times. For example: “吃一堑(pit)长一智(wit)”(A fall into the pit,a gain in your wit.) once was said so fluently without thinking that it became:“吃一智(wit)长一堑(pit)””(A fall into the wit,a gain in your pit.) ! That's really an interesting phenomenon in language! O(∩_∩)O~
2010年8月11日
That's not true. We have this "spoonerism" anyway. I know because I have this kind of experience. Usually it happens we you speak too fast. But this is really rare.
2010年8月10日
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