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Zhonglish, a term for Chinese influenced by English, is a portmanteau of Zhōngwén (中文; 'Chinese language') and "English". [11] [12] Some peculiar Chinese English cannot be labeled Chinglish because it is grammatically correct, and Victor Mair calls this emerging dialect "Xinhua English or New China News English", based on the Xinhua News ...
The newscasts on TVB Pearl are in English while newscasts on TVB Finance & Information Channel are in Mandarin. Good Morning Hong Kong and Putonghua Financial Report, and other business newscasts are seen on weekdays. Also, programmes have in-vision captions for the hearing impaired, as mandated by local regulations (this was originally only ...
Local morning and evening newspapers concentrating on news and feature stories about local people and events were extremely popular, selling out each day shortly after they arrived at the newsstands. In June 1981 the English-language China Daily began publication.
Morning Express (Chinese: 晨光第一线) is a documentary/current affairs programme produced by Mediacorp Channel 8. It is hosted by a team of the three hosts/newscasters consisting of Soh Bee Lan, Zhao Quan Yin, Ng Siew Ling and Yang Zheng Hua.
Good Morning, Sir! ( Chinese : 早安老师 !) is a Singaporean Chinese-language drama series. The series stars Li Nanxing , Chen Liping , Zhu Houren , Hong Huifang , Xia Chuan , Aileen Tan , Madeline Chu , Hong Peixing , Jin Yinji and Lin Tianlong .
Chen began her acting career in 1985 with the Singapore Broadcasting Corporation after completing the drama training course. She is best known for her role as "Miss Ai-Yo-Yo" (哎哟哟老师) in the Singapore Chinese drama series Good Morning, Sir!
Newscenter 4: Morning Edition (1980–1986) Newscenter 4: Noon Edition in Filipino (1980–1986) News Today. News Today: Evening Edition (1974–1980) News Today: Final Edition (1974–1980) News Today: Morning Edition (1974–1980) News Today: Noon Edition in Filipino (1974–1980) PAGASA I-Weather (2012) Panahon.TV (2012–2016) Pangunahing ...
Chinese greeting (Fist-and-palm) practised by Tsai Ing-wen, President of the Republic of China (Taiwan) The most common Chinese greeting, Gongshou, features the right fist placed in the palm of the left hand and both shaken back and forth two or three times, it may be accompanied by a head nod or bow. The gesture may be used on meeting and ...