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posted by n1 on Friday October 24 2014, @02:41AM   Printer-friendly
from the more-from-our-new-overlords dept.

Abby Phillip reports at the Washington Post that that Mark Zuckerberg just posted a 30-minute Q&A at Tsinghua University in Beijing in which he answered every question exclusively in Chinese - a notoriously difficult language to learn and particularly, to speak. "It isn't just Zuckerberg's linguistic acrobatics that make this a notable moment," writes Philip. "This small gesture — although some would argue that it is a huge moment — is perhaps his strongest foray into the battle for hearts and minds in China." Zuckerberg and Facebook have been aggressively courting Chinese users for years and the potential financial upside for the business. Although Beijing has mostly banned Facebook, the company signed a contract for its first ever office in China earlier this year. A Westerner speaking Mandarin in China — at any level — tends to elicit joy from average Chinese, who seem to appreciate the effort and respect they feel learning Mandarin demonstrates. So how well did Zuckerberg actually do? One Mandarin speaker rates Zuckerberg's language skills at the level of a seven year old: "It's hard not see a patronizing note in the Chinese audience's reaction to Zuckerberg's Mandarin. To borrow from Samuel Johnson's quip, he was like a dog walking on its hind legs: It wasn't done well, but it was a surprise to see it done at all."

 
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  • (Score: 2) by CRCulver on Friday October 24 2014, @07:10AM

    by CRCulver (4390) on Friday October 24 2014, @07:10AM (#109498) Homepage
    For those formally studying putonghua in an academic setting, the complaint is usually the opposite, that Taiwanese Mandarin or the Mandarin of southern Mainland Chinese is difficult to understand. This has a legitimate basis, as /s/ and /ʂ/ have merged in these dialects, and if one has become used to the contrast from standard putongua or the speech of northern Chinese, then the lack of it can be confusing.
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