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  1. In Standard Chinese, the four tones are high flat, high rising, low dipping, and falling; in the Beijing dialect, the first two tones are higher, the third one dips more prominently, and the fourth one falls more.

  2. Undoubtedly the biggest difference between the Beijing dialect and standard Mandarin is the use of dialect words and expressions that are unique to Beijing. Some examples include: These are just a fraction of the hundreds of unique expressions found in the Beijing dialect, although many have fallen into disuse over the years.

  3. It's probably the biggest source of misinformation out there about the Chinese language, so today Echo and David take to our studio to chat about what exactly constitutes the difference between standard mandarin and the Beijing dialect.

  4. Apr 10, 2023 · While the Beijing dialect shares many similarities with standard Mandarin, it also has unique words and phrases. For example, instead of saying " hǎo " (你好) for hello , people in Beijing might say " nǐ zēnme yàng " (你怎么样) instead.

  5. Oct 1, 2024 · Chinese uses tones to differentiate words. There are four tones (five if you count the neutral tone) in Mandarin Chinese. Example words and phrases: 你好 (Nǐ hǎo) — Hello. 你好吗? (Nǐ hǎo ma?) — How are you? 你吃饭了吗? (Nǐ chīfànle ma?) — Have you eaten yet? 2. Cantonese Chinese. Where it’s spoken: China’s Guangdong province, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Macau.

  6. Mar 17, 2023 · Standard Mandarin itself is the Beijing dialect of the larger Mandarin language group. The Chinese central government chose it as the standard, national language in the 1930s, elevating it above the other varieties of Chinese language.

  7. Apr 21, 2016 · It's probably the biggest source of misinformation out there about the Chinese language, so today Echo and David take to our studio to chat about what exactly constitutes the difference between standard mandarin and the Beijing dialect.

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