Cantonese vs Taishanese (ft. Inspirlang)

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  • čas přidán 28. 01. 2021
  • Jade's Channels:
    / @taishanesestorieswith...
    / inspirlang
    inspirlang.com/
    Promo code: CWB10
    The Cantonese community is full of people with Taishanese roots including my own grandma ✨婆婆✨! Even though #Taishanese #Toisanese #Hoisanwa is part of the same family as Cantonese, it’s very distinct. Although I heard it growing up, I never learned very much. That’s why I’m super happy to have my friend Jade from InspirLang teach us a little about it and explain three main differences between the dialects…in Taishanese!
    Also, if you like the channel, please consider joining my Patreon where I make bonus content for Cantonese learners. There you'll find the transcript to this video, dialogues and worksheets to learn traditional characters. And if you like the sweatshirt I'm wearing in the video, check out my website for official CwB merch.
    ☀️support the channel☀️
    store - www.cantonesewithbrittany.com/
    patreon - / cantonesewithbrittany
    ✨connect with me✨
    instagram - / cantonese.with.brittany
    facebook - / cantowithbrittany

Komentáře • 371

  • @Tsub0mi
    @Tsub0mi Před 3 lety +90

    I have never heard Taishanese spoken so gently before. I almost felt like I wasn't listening to Taishanese LOL.

  • @babyshaya
    @babyshaya Před 3 lety +301

    For all of the people who are familiar with Taishanese, the most amazing part about her speaking is that she didn't curse once. That's a huge feat in itself. I recall the first time visiting Taishan and afraid I'd accidentally curse and embarrass myself only to find out that cursing is an integral part of Taishanese all over the world.

    • @BadRawrmance
      @BadRawrmance Před 3 lety +15

      I cracked up reading this because I know this ALLL too well!

    • @Gunman1628
      @Gunman1628 Před 3 lety +6

      @@BadRawrmance like riding a horse across the sea?

    • @mouschiu
      @mouschiu Před 3 lety +28

      I‘m surprised by how calm she sounded too. It always sounded like a verbal battle between my elders growing up

    • @EyD1
      @EyD1 Před 3 lety +11

      Eww necka ma. Ga hi ... I hear this shit everyday from my dad

    • @BadRawrmance
      @BadRawrmance Před 3 lety

      @@EyD1 even worse when you're just enjoying dim sum and the uncle at the table beside you says that after ever other normal word 🤦🤦

  • @CrimsonEclipse
    @CrimsonEclipse Před 2 lety +33

    She makes Taishanese sounds so elegant. She is literally the most graceful Taishanese speaker I ever heard.

    • @jackjackyphantom8854
      @jackjackyphantom8854 Před 10 měsíci

      Toishanese sounds a little like vietnamese, at least phonologically.

  • @dannywu7
    @dannywu7 Před 3 lety +196

    As both a Cantonese and Taishanese speaker, I really appreciate that you're putting yourself out there to promote the dialects :) Keep on the good work ;)

    • @dannywu7
      @dannywu7 Před 2 lety +3

      @@anakitiktokwi2939 I don't think it's a different language. They are more like distinguished oral pronunciation but uses more or less the same writing and grammar. Obviously, there are regional slangs and expressions. But essentially they are dialects of... (Not a big of this statement since Taishanese and Cantonese are actually older) Mandarin. Given that mandarin is currently the official language in China... Then the rest qualifies as dialect by Western definition... But everyone knows that the ancestral language of China sounded more like Cantonese.

    • @Hkamerica273
      @Hkamerica273 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@dannywu7ntonese / Hokkien / min / mandarin etc are 100% separate different languages. just like how Spanish / French / English even tho these language unite under a common Latin language that share similarities but since China is one big country whereas the Latin language were separate country so they were officially a separate language so if China was never one big country then all these Chinese language would be officially different languages within Asia like Korean / Japan / Vietnamese etc… they share similarities as 5-10%. even less than that. I grew up in a family speaking Min language and I can tell you that it barely share any similarities to either mandarin or canto. I can guarantee not one Chinese speaker can understood a full sentence of this language due to its exposure even less than canto. So to call Chinese language ‘dialect’ is not true and total propaganda narrative. comparing min / canto / Hokkien or any Chinese language to mandarin or northern language is like pretending you can understood French since you speak English perfectly. Also just to point out but the grammar is absolutely not the same. I speak min but it’s share no similarity to mandarin and canto in grammar. Think before you speak.

    • @cosmari245
      @cosmari245 Před měsícem

      @@Hkamerica273 as a taishanese person who still identifies as cantonese (same culture but language differences from standard cantonese, also grew up being exposed/hearing both, parents can speak both), I totally see what you're saying tho many ppl typically see taishanese as a cantonese dialect rather than its own language, it takes from standard cantonese and is a variant of it. It's complicated tho... I've always grown up kind of conflicted on my identity, being born and raised in america doesn't help lol

  • @pinkdagger
    @pinkdagger Před 3 lety +99

    As someone who can never tell when I'm speaking Taishanese vs Cantonese to Cantonese-only speakers, I appreciate any Taishanese resources made readily available for younger people. It used to be you could practice Taishanese with any Chinatown shopkeep, but those days are coming to an end!

    • @wenze12
      @wenze12 Před 2 lety +4

      I can relate to this as when we grew up we never were told the difference so we just thought it was just all Cantonese. I always get asked if my parents were from Taishan but I can never tell myself when I speak.

  • @xtzyshuadog
    @xtzyshuadog Před 3 lety +101

    *As someone with grandparents who each speak one of these languages/dialects, this is amazing to hear. What a fantastic introduction.*

    • @Josh-bf6ht
      @Josh-bf6ht Před 3 lety +1

      My grandparents are the same!

    • @sylviaseeto1664
      @sylviaseeto1664 Před rokem +1

      Totally agree. Loved to hear both as both also run in both parents too.

  • @KristaGoon
    @KristaGoon Před 3 lety +66

    You speak Taishanese really well. And what you said is true - Taishanese can easily understand Cantonese but Cantonese don't necessarily understand Taishanese. I grew up with parents who spoke both. Oddly though I could easily switch from Taishanese (when I speak to my dad) to Cantonese (when I spoke to my mum). And when I get stuck and can't think of a word to express what I want to say, I just say it in English! Keep up this fantastic way of preserving the language. In Malaysia where I live, Taishanese is rarely spoken nowadays.

    • @tangtc60
      @tangtc60 Před 2 lety +3

      It is good to know that there are still some of my fellow Malaysian who knows how to speak Toishan wah . Only my grandparents, my parents and my cousins who are more senior knows how to speak this dialect. Unfortunately I only pick up very little of this dialect and can understand most of it but speak very little of it. The reason is my parent spoke mostly Cantonese at home because my grandmother from my mother side spoke a different kind of Taishanese slang. What I understood from my dad is my ancestor are from Hoi Peng. Hope you past this Taishanese on to the next generation. We are rare in KL.

    • @KristaGoon
      @KristaGoon Před 2 lety +2

      @@tangtc60 I had aunts and uncles and grandma who used Hoisanwa with each other so it was really easy to pick it up when I was young. I am proud that I can still speak Hoisanwa and I think us Hoisan ngin are some of the rarest dialect speakers around. I used to speak Hoisanwa in public (a.k.a when shopping with my sisters). We could talk about the price, the stuff we liked or didn't right in front of the shop assistants or vendors as they would NEVER in a million years understand us!

    • @tommywong9056
      @tommywong9056 Před rokem

      Why u use the word preserving taishanese, why i ? Is that mean taishanese no longer use in daily day conversion? And why does ppl can speak taishanese can easily understand Cantonese speaking , any possible reason behind ? Thank you.

    • @anakitiktokwi2939
      @anakitiktokwi2939 Před rokem

      ​@@KristaGoon wow di Malaysia ada org hoisan rupanya... Rasanya banyak bahasa cina bukan mandarin di Malaysia semakin pupus... Sedih

    • @KristaGoon
      @KristaGoon Před 11 měsíci

      @@anakitiktokwi2939 di sini ramai orang Hoisan tetapi ramai sudah tidak berbahasa Hoisan lagi. Ramai ibubapa tidak mengajar anak mereka menggunakan bahasa Hoisan. Saya amat berbangga kerana masih lagi menggunakan bahasa Hoisan sebab dari kecil lagi, bapa saya bertutur dengan saya. Banyak bahasa Cina atau dialek Cina masih digunakan di Malaysia - Hokkien, Kantonis, Teochew, Hakka walaupun generasi muda sekarang lebih suka menggunakan Mandarin.

  • @eb.3764
    @eb.3764 Před 3 lety +21

    Wow it's amazing to find people still speaking Taishanese without much code switching for other languages

  • @KH-xu2sz
    @KH-xu2sz Před 3 lety +9

    雖然我唔係台山人,但都非常支持你傳承台山話,加油

  • @crescentindigomoon
    @crescentindigomoon Před 3 lety +22

    Wow finally someone can explain the dialect while speaking fluently

  • @hmwong88
    @hmwong88 Před 11 měsíci +7

    I'm Toisanese, born and raised in Boston, but later moved to Nova Scotia, Canada. WOW!!!! I am impressed with your Toisan! I thought the young generation only spoke Cantonese and/ or Mandarin. Great video, ladies!

  • @susanmok5994
    @susanmok5994 Před 3 lety +35

    Wow...listening to Jade speak in Taishanese took me down memory lane as I heard it spoken by my mother and her friends when I was growing up. Felt very nostalgic!!! Jade is a very eloquent young lady. A very helpful video differentiating Cantonese and Taishanese!!! Thank you! 🙏😊

  • @schu-ng4897
    @schu-ng4897 Před rokem +12

    I grew up hearing and speaking simple sentences in both dialects. For the longest time, I thought that Toi San Wah was a regional accent of Cantonese. I was surprised to find out that it's a different dialect! I knew to speak Taishanese to my grandparents and older relatives, but to speak Cantonese to the kids at school, like it was "turning on" an accent. I'm glad that this video explains why it's harder for Cantonese people to understand Taishanese than the other way around. One time, I translated what some Taishanese speakers were saying to my friends who were born in Hong Kong. They were amazed that a 4th generation American-born Chinese like me could understand Taishanese. Now I know why!

    • @mackerelle9789
      @mackerelle9789 Před 3 měsíci

      No one really explained this to me growing up though I've heard "toisan wah", and I always wondered why my grandma and her senior citizen friends all had what I also thought was an accent but my parents didn't. It throws me off a little still when I hear it from someone who isn't a senior citizen since I had that misconception embedded.

  • @WabacControl
    @WabacControl Před 2 lety +13

    As a kid growing up in Vancouver BC we would hear a lot of toi saan waa and other Four Counties dialects spoken in bakeries, cha chaan teng and at dim sum too.
    Thanks for showcasing this important and historic dialect. It's such a big part of the history of Canada!

  • @fracegont
    @fracegont Před 10 měsíci +3

    how have i been alive for 26 living in guangzhou COMPLETELY OBLIVIOUS to the fact that ths language exists omg

  • @kevinmui1544
    @kevinmui1544 Před 3 lety +8

    Been looking for these kind of videos! I've been born and raised as a 1st gen chinese-american and my taishanese has been going to the sewer. Need to clean it up!

  • @nathanjames4734
    @nathanjames4734 Před 3 lety +36

    Can Jade please do more videos! I’ve been dying to learn Toisanese and she’s one of the clearest, most articulate speakers I’ve heard

    • @cantobritt
      @cantobritt  Před 3 lety +9

      Make sure to go check out her channel inspirlang! And she also has free mini Taishanese lessons on her website 🤓

    • @sylviaseeto1664
      @sylviaseeto1664 Před rokem

      Yes! Please!

  • @shockalockabocka
    @shockalockabocka Před 10 měsíci +3

    This is the Chinese I grew up with. I felt SEEN so much. My parents love this, bc this is what they grew up w as kids in the 50’s

  • @leslielau9575
    @leslielau9575 Před 2 lety +3

    Really nice video, I am a native speaker of Toishanese, Cantonese and Mandarin.

  • @tknmn
    @tknmn Před 3 lety +14

    My grandfather was from Taishan. Growing up he would speak with his sisters and I would not understand much of what they said except when I was being scolded. Sadly they’ve all passed away, but video reminds me of them. Thanks!

  • @lekwanduh
    @lekwanduh Před 3 lety +7

    this was so amazing! really appreciating those family roots!

  • @junpeng4784
    @junpeng4784 Před 3 lety +9

    Awesome coverage, made me felt at home even on CZcams lol

  • @qdynasty102
    @qdynasty102 Před 3 lety +3

    Love this. Keep it up!

  • @zuozhen4758
    @zuozhen4758 Před 3 lety +7

    You two are an inspiration ! And geniuses! Keep up the good work in preserving Cantonese and Taishanese.

  • @HoisanSauce
    @HoisanSauce Před 3 lety +4

    Love the clarity of the presentation! Can't wait to see more Taishanese videos!

  • @wulucy1909
    @wulucy1909 Před 3 lety +3

    This video is really informative. Thanks!

  • @Jay-L
    @Jay-L Před 3 lety +3

    Somehow this popped up in my recommendations. Glad it did! Subscribed to both channels.

  • @percarell6550
    @percarell6550 Před 3 lety +5

    Amazing to listen to, thanks for sharing!

  • @christinedevillier8919
    @christinedevillier8919 Před 3 lety +8

    That was beautifully done!!! Looking forward to more videos celebrating Hoisanwah.

  • @TheVivDiv
    @TheVivDiv Před 3 lety +2

    I love this video! I speak Cantonese and my ex’s family were from Taishan and it’s taking me back to being round their dinner table and wondering why I couldn’t understand them lol. Thank you!

  • @uItimatewarrior
    @uItimatewarrior Před 3 lety +3

    It's videos like yours that make me want to get out of my own comfort zone and to start my own Cantonese channel.

  • @aktionmancer604
    @aktionmancer604 Před 3 lety +5

    Amazing!!
    Can’t wait for part 2.
    Taishan accent on point as well!

  • @bb96kjl
    @bb96kjl Před 3 lety +12

    Thanks for the video, it was really interesting to learn about Taishanese. It’s mostly unintelligible to me but I caught the odd word. Brittney, your Cantonese is so clearly spoken, I really appreciate the channel!

  • @meocon3144
    @meocon3144 Před 3 lety +3

    You guys are my favorite Cantonese teachers. Thanks a lot. Keep up the good work! Add oil!

  • @judywong3432
    @judywong3432 Před 3 lety +5

    💕💕💕 my paternal grandma and grandpa is no longer around. Watching this video warms me up!!! It’s so nice to hear the dialects! I miss my fam!! Thank you for making this video!

  • @pcimprezzive
    @pcimprezzive Před 3 lety +6

    I can relate to this! My toisan parents landed in Chinatown NYC in the late 60s. Most of Manhattan's Chinatown is/was Toisan but many moved out to the other nyc boroughs. Love this series Brittany & Jade!

  • @patc.2655
    @patc.2655 Před 2 lety +4

    I loved listening to you. I use to speak Hoisan wa with my grandparents. Now whenever I hear it, my ears perk up and I get a smile. Don't let it vanish. Keep it going:)

  • @awdx4g63
    @awdx4g63 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for doing this. I'm interested in other Chinese dialects. This is a gem!

  • @vanoffanelia
    @vanoffanelia Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for making the videos. I myself am Taishanese. And am motivated in learning it by watching your videos.

  • @ricquito8389
    @ricquito8389 Před 3 lety +5

    Nice video and keep it up. It definitely shows you put a lot of time and effort into this, especially appreciate the subtitles in both Traditional Chinese script and what looks to be a modified Jyutping system. In college, my girlfriend (at the time)'s family spoke a language very similar to Taishanese: Hoipingnese (開平話). For that reason, I picked it up, to a limited extent. Since then I can recognize that it's either Hoipingnese or Taishanese in NYC Chinatown - where previously I thought it was because my Cantonese skills had gone down. Again - thanks for putting this together. Sometimes "dialects" get a bad rap; and to me they shouldn't. Looking forward to seeing more.

  • @RLEofficial
    @RLEofficial Před 3 lety +8

    Thank you for covering this! My mom is Toisan from HK so I learned bits and pieces of it growing up along with HK Cantonese!
    Also even more awesome to learn you’re a fellow hoi san ngin (台山人)!

  • @donnaroni
    @donnaroni Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you and Jade (at Inspirlang) for this!! I stumbled upon your channel thru her most recent podcast featuring the interview with you! Thank you two for further inspiring me to keep learning and improving!! 👍👍加油!

  • @pandabear153
    @pandabear153 Před 3 lety +2

    Hoisan Vah sounds so nice! Hoisan boy here! Thanks for posting!

  • @DragonFire0128
    @DragonFire0128 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for this video! My grandparents took care of me when I was young and taught me Toisanese. When I was going to school, it was funny that I could understand Cantonese. When I tried to talk to the Cantonese kids at school, they would tell me my pronunciation is terrible and that I’m speaking everything incorrectly. For the longest time, I thought that was the case but this video’s explanation cleared up a lot of questions.

  • @gavp5248
    @gavp5248 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for the jyutping, many people don't bother and don't realize it's so important for learning the correct tones

  • @xlartanislx
    @xlartanislx Před 3 lety +6

    You still hear taishanese being spoken in east chinatown in toronto. Its so interesting because as a cantonese speaker you definitely pick up on a lot. Its like a mix between canto and mandarin.

  • @soozjoo
    @soozjoo Před 3 lety +8

    Jade is amazing and speaks Hoisan like a master!

  • @x_jaydn
    @x_jaydn Před 3 lety +4

    Just found your channel.
    I'm loving the super-accurate 白話文字慕!~

  • @bringbackmy90s
    @bringbackmy90s Před 2 lety +5

    What a nice languange! With the subtitles on it is very interesting to follow the Taishanese phrases and words, especially if you have already some basic knowledge of Hokkien, and HK Cantonese. I think Jade is great in her presentation of the language of her ancestors, so I hope Taishanese can be preserved as well. Subscribed to both of you.

  • @rosannetom6336
    @rosannetom6336 Před 3 lety +2

    Ai Yaah! I understand some of what you're saying! I"m a young school drop out and I regret having dropped out. Only my pwah pwah and grand aunty spoke to me in Toisan-wah. Now they're all in heaven. I only remember the prayer my grandma taught me when I was so young. And Yes! Amazing! No cuss words in your video! Thank you for your video!

  • @jingmingrong2454
    @jingmingrong2454 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for making this, I looked for something like this for so long to trace and relearn my roots. You can be sure that you have an immediate subscriber.

  • @user-og1nu5pb8c
    @user-og1nu5pb8c Před 2 lety +15

    I'm a Korean living in Guangzhou and Shenzhen for more than 20 years. In addition to Mandarin I've also learned how to speak Cantonese, Hakka and Teochew (潮州话)which are the three dominating local dialects around here. This 台山话 sounds pretty amazing, it's just like a mixture of Hakka (客家话)and Cantonese(广东话), but in terms of pronunciation there is a consonant cluster sound that I've never heard in any Chinese language before, especially the onset when pronouncing "想(slieng), 三(slam) and 心(slim)".
    This must be a remaining part of archaic Chinese, I guess, which at that time still had many consonant cluster onsets before the differentiation of tones started to take place.

    • @songwaikit8718
      @songwaikit8718 Před 2 lety +1

      i actually wonder if there's any historical influence with indo-china languages because some glottal stops reminds me of vietnamese actually. and i am impressed by the number of dialects u have learnt. Im from malaysia and i speak cantonese, can roughly understand hakka as it's not too far apart and my dad is teochew so i understand some basics. u indeed are a polyglot!

    • @user-og1nu5pb8c
      @user-og1nu5pb8c Před 2 lety +1

      @@songwaikit8718 From your Cantonese name I can roughly guess that it may be written like 宋偉傑. The glottal stop you say that you heard in Vietnamese is a common factor occuring in Korean, Japanese including various South China dialects. Almost more than 60% of the Vietnamese vocabulary consists of Chinese loanwords just like Korean and Japanese.
      Take this common expression "tạm biệt" as an example, which actually comes from the Chinese term 暫別(to temporarily part each other). If pronounced in either Cantonese, Hokkien, Teochew, Hakka or even in Korean, there is a glottal stop in the second syllable each.

    • @songwaikit8718
      @songwaikit8718 Před 2 lety

      @@user-og1nu5pb8c u r very good u got my name right and in traditional Chinese. U can make ur own videos. To me the rhythm of the speech is partly why sudden parts "sound" vietnamese to me which is different from korean, not sure if u agree. and also because according to anthropology southeast asians migrated from south China

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Před 2 lety

      Did you take a linguistics class ?

    • @jewellui
      @jewellui Před rokem

      What made you decide to live in China?
      I agree I can hear some similarities to Cantonese and Hakka but then again having listened to numerous videos on various Chinese dialects I’ve come to the conclusion most are actually closely related to each other and have influenced each other.

  • @MikeCheeno
    @MikeCheeno Před 3 lety +4

    As someone who grew up speaking both at home it's pretty dope to see other people who are also able to speak both!

  • @Thewoksoflife1
    @Thewoksoflife1 Před rokem +1

    This is such a useful video! Thank you so much. Really appreciate all the effort that went into the subtitles too!

    • @cantobritt
      @cantobritt  Před rokem

      OMG I’m so honored and thank you for your kind words! Glad you enjoyed it :)
      P.S. I’m a big fan of your blog; preordered your book last year!

  • @cpwong7977
    @cpwong7977 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Good for you Brittany, I’m proud of you for keeping your mother tongue (Cantonese)☀️! Your Cantonese is number one💪

  • @giovanniconte7905
    @giovanniconte7905 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome video, this was really interesting.
    I also love how generally at least one word for each phrase in the Jade's clip are colored differently to make instantly clear what that specific word means in english, it would be awesome if you could start doing this as well! (I think you used to do that in beginner animated videos but I think it would an awesome aid in intermediate videos as well)

    • @InspirLang
      @InspirLang Před 3 lety +1

      Haha Brittany your fans got too spoiled! 🤣

  • @billyc4365
    @billyc4365 Před 2 lety +1

    OMG seeing this video remind of my of po po so much. thank you for this

  • @SoggyMayonaise
    @SoggyMayonaise Před rokem +2

    my mother is taishanese and I can confirm this is exactly how she speaks to her friends and family

  • @eeynoj
    @eeynoj Před 3 lety +3

    Great work! More please.

  • @Froopular
    @Froopular Před 3 lety +3

    since my hoo hoo and gong gong passed, It is soo comforting to just hear it. I wish soo deeply I was taught it.

  • @Redleg383
    @Redleg383 Před 6 měsíci +2

    She's a very good teacher with excellent diction. My father spoke Toisonese but had a hard time understanding Cantonese (Sang Wah) even though he lived and worked in Hong Kong for many years.

    • @simonkuo7045
      @simonkuo7045 Před 3 měsíci

      thumbsUp @Redleg383 you're the first person who has correctly named cantonese as GwongJauWaa or SoundWaa, and not GwongDoongWaa.

  • @tommychew7516
    @tommychew7516 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome Video Jade,,, sending my regards to you from Malaysia
    Both my parents and grandparents from both side are also Taishanese :)

  • @wolfyklip
    @wolfyklip Před měsícem

    Awesome to hear another person speak my toishan!! I was born in SF,Ca in the 1950's, so my parents spoke it. I could speak toishan, but grew up at a young age to coummnacate to parents, while speaking English on the outside to others. I'm in my 60's now, and seldom use it, as my parents are gone, still able to speak it on a limited basis .

  • @CyndyTangerineyyyy
    @CyndyTangerineyyyy Před 3 lety +10

    It was interesting learning about the differences between Cantonese and Taishanese. :3

  • @meocon3144
    @meocon3144 Před 3 lety +3

    老师新年快乐!万事如意!牛年大吉!

  • @sotmMrPants
    @sotmMrPants Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks Brittany for advocating for a Taishanese channel. Ngo gung4 gung po4 po2 dou1 lei dou Toi San. But I don't remember them speaking it in San Francisco... I noticed some similarities in the food my mom cooks to some recipes in Toisan. Hoping to learn more.

  • @orodriguez947
    @orodriguez947 Před rokem +2

    I've heard of Taishanese. I had a friend who was born in the U.S. and could inly speak English but could understand his Dad's Taishanese. I really didn't know anything about Taishanese until now. Thanks.

  • @juliette7151
    @juliette7151 Před 3 lety +8

    thank you for giving jade this spotlight! I'm overjoyed to have found her through you, it's so cool to see a romanization for hoisan because I have never been able to find good resources for learning hoisan. keep it up!

    • @InspirLang
      @InspirLang Před 3 lety +4

      Tears in my eyes 🥺 I am just as overjoyed to have this chance to present this to the tribe ❤️

    • @xoxuwux
      @xoxuwux Před 3 lety

      @Juliette omg is that sky!!

    • @juliette7151
      @juliette7151 Před 3 lety

      ​@@xoxuwux yes hahaha I love chill indie games

  • @easyteh4getperson
    @easyteh4getperson Před 7 měsíci +1

    the most proper toisanwa i've ever heard. even at 4:00 my accent is different from those pronunciations. the accent can even vary from family to family and if your parents are from different villages like mine are, then you'll have a mixture of both accents. both parents tried to "correct" me but there's no changing that lol well anyway, great video!

  • @austinip5273
    @austinip5273 Před 3 lety +2

    Girl I’m lucky to be able to speak Cantonese intelligibly, but I must say taishanese has helped me with my mandarin. Thanks for the video by the way! 👍

  • @joyceli3532
    @joyceli3532 Před 2 lety +2

    I love this!!! I don't know anyone else around me who can speak Taishanese that is young.

  • @Mstotoro90
    @Mstotoro90 Před 2 lety +2

    thanks Brittany for the Taishan tutorial. My late grandfather was from Enping, China. Only my mum could speak fluent Enping (Siyap) dialect. hope you post more videos about this! i am learning those 單字from your video. keep it up!

    • @tangtc60
      @tangtc60 Před 2 lety

      My late grandfather is from Hoi Peng, China. Is there a difference in dialect between Enping & Hoi Peng.??

  • @hitokiriheero
    @hitokiriheero Před 2 lety +3

    Taishan is the craziest language because I can understand some dialects and completely not understand other dialects

  • @JRodzTv
    @JRodzTv Před 3 lety +14

    A lot of Cantonese and toisan in SF California

    • @helennyc4388
      @helennyc4388 Před 3 lety

      Many early immigrants to North America, late 19th and early 20th century, were from that region of Guangdong province. Growing up in NYC (here for over 50 years), going to Chinatown, you would hear mainly 四邑 (which includes Toishanese) dialect spoken. My parent were originally from 開平, next to Toishan. Nowadays, few around here speak Toishanese anymore.

    • @JRodzTv
      @JRodzTv Před 3 lety

      @@helennyc4388 yes a lot in Peru and in Panama too.

  • @yiuhsi2118
    @yiuhsi2118 Před 3 lety +2

    I speak taishanese and I think it’s so cool that you put in the work to preserve the language

  • @wklee69
    @wklee69 Před 3 lety +3

    You guys terrific! As a HK Cantonese, just found that quite a number of Taishan phrases are submerged into our spoke. Cantonese! Wanna learn more and will soon subscribe....

  • @slamdunk406
    @slamdunk406 Před 3 lety +8

    I've been studying Mandarin for over three years and Japanese for over one year. I have some interest in Cantonese as well. I've never heard of Taishanese before! So many dialects in China! I think it's really cool when people are committed to keeping their local dialects alive! It's awesome! 加油!

    • @douglei4413
      @douglei4413 Před 2 lety

      If you ever been to any chinatown before the year 2000 then you have heard it (Taishanese was the default Chinese language spoken in chinatowns before the influx of Cantonese speakers came to the USA during the 2000 and mandarin speakers beginning in the 2010s )

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Před 2 lety

      @@douglei4413 Oh that's so cool. I just heard it for the first time today. It sounds pretty and peaked my interest. I feel like I want to learn several Chinese dialects rather than learn Spanish and Bengali as my 3rd and ,4th choices.😂
      Right now I'm in HSK 3 level of Mandarin and A1 level of Korean . I want to learn Cantonese and now I'm discovering Taishanese, and Hakka. It all sounds like music and poetry to me. I love the Chinese accent. Not when speaking English,but when speaking the natural tongues. I just adore it. 🥰🌹

  • @dotlouie4863
    @dotlouie4863 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I was just commenting how I am losing a lot of my Chinese dialect to the extent I am getting confused with Gong Dong wha and my real dialect, Toishan wha. I really find this language video ready great and at least I can still understand the spoken word. For me , it is so good to see someone making an effort to save the dialect. Looking forward to more videos on Toishan dialect.

  • @SieghartPercy
    @SieghartPercy Před rokem +1

    I finally was able to see family after many years, during which time my Chinese fluency decreased dramatically. After talking to them and finding this video, I feel so much better about relearning this language!

  • @ericwhloh
    @ericwhloh Před 3 lety +1

    What a beautiful language! I had a hard time understanding but if you listen closely, it is very similar to hakka and cantonese mixed together!

  • @emilyhii4105
    @emilyhii4105 Před rokem +1

    Thank you I literally have been looking for the language I speak, it was so similar to Cantonese but not Cantonese so I didn’t know what to tell people

  • @CyndyTangerineyyyy
    @CyndyTangerineyyyy Před 3 lety +8

    Ah, I follow Inspirlang on Spotify!

  • @alansmithc6669
    @alansmithc6669 Před 3 lety +3

    Good job! Keep it up! Hall Side Lee ah! =)

  • @teddybear9204
    @teddybear9204 Před rokem +2

    I speak Taishanese too! Still trying to learn mandarin and cantonese!

  • @ahenrycc84
    @ahenrycc84 Před 2 lety +13

    As a native Cantonese speaker originally from Hong Kong, I can understand about 30-40% of Jade's Taishanese without looking at subtitles. My wife speaks a variation of Taishanese, the one from Kaiping and I can understand about 50% of hers, maybe perhaps I listen to her talking to her parents a lot more? I think the key to understand Taishanese better is to determine how its pattern of sounds, tones and pronunciations correspond/map to those in Cantonese (e.g. "sam" VS "hlam" for “三“). And also, awesome that you included the subtitles of Jade's Taishanese in the actual Taishanese vernacular (rather than in "Standard Chinese") so that I can learn more about the words in Taishanese that are actually different from Cantonese!

    • @babyshaya
      @babyshaya Před rokem +3

      You're wrong about three. It's "shlahm" 😆. Hong Kong people will never be able to follow taishan to a T simply because white Cantonese is hard wired. There are crazy variations of things as well such as telephone, Cantonese it's "Deen wah" (electric spoke) in toisan it's "hom shlen" (crying or calling line) Two completely different things 😂

    • @schu-ng4897
      @schu-ng4897 Před rokem +1

      @@babyshaya Good example. I was told that "hom shlen" is an old-fashioned word. I was corrected and told that it is "en wah"

    • @babyshaya
      @babyshaya Před rokem

      @@schu-ng4897 there are a lot of different words besides that one, here's another: In America a quarter (coin) in Cantonese is "lerng ho boon" 2 dimes and a half or "kaw-da" in taishanese it's freaking "cheen bot" money eight. Try to figure that one out.

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Před rokem

      @@babyshaya 喊線 LOLOLOLOL

    • @mirae9163
      @mirae9163 Před rokem

      Really? I'm also a native Cantonese speaker, but I could understand 70~80% of she's Toishanese without subtitles.

  • @nicoleraheem1195
    @nicoleraheem1195 Před 2 lety +2

    I just learned about Taishanese through a video of a black guy speaking Mandarin Chinese with his Vietnamese friend.
    After I reach HSK level 6 in Mandarin, I want to learn Cantonese, Bengali, and Korean. At least b2-C1 level with these.

  • @heckkoch9
    @heckkoch9 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Brittany is so adorable!

  • @leelaifun9976
    @leelaifun9976 Před 2 lety +3

    新会人报到!听四邑话真系好亲切!台山话属粤语四邑方言片,是四邑话的代表语言。某些语境下,台山话就是四邑话的代名词。四邑粤语是粤语系统中跟广州话差异最大的一种方言之一。主要分布在中国广东省五邑地区(原称四邑,后因鹤山加入改称五邑)的新会、台山、开平、恩平四地,以及江门市区、鹤山的部分地区、中山小部份地区和珠海的斗门区,海外的华侨社区(尤其是北美),台山话是四邑粤语最具影响力的一支。

  • @poke-sx3ji
    @poke-sx3ji Před 3 lety +1

    好多謝你呢個視頻俾我聽到台山話

  • @fuidiantolie795
    @fuidiantolie795 Před 2 lety +3

    Nei kong ngam.😁😁 ngoi nang kau hong ney kong ma. I from indonesia.

  • @wilianty2893
    @wilianty2893 Před 3 lety +2

    I'm Indonesian Taishanese, it's great to see young people preserve the language! Keep going!

  • @wojiaoxiaoQi
    @wojiaoxiaoQi Před 3 lety +5

    My mum speaks hakka gutted she never taught me! Please learn /teach us some hakka! Your voice is soothing im learning cantonese living away from home!!

  • @plan360
    @plan360 Před 3 lety +4

    Interesting. Thank you.

  • @belikestephanie
    @belikestephanie Před rokem +1

    I grew up with a dad speaking Cantonese and mom speaking Taishanese. I didn’t realize until I was much older that they were speaking different dialects. Glad to see there are other Taishanese speakers out there.

    • @jewellui
      @jewellui Před rokem

      Wouldn’t your mother have known Cantonese though? Especially over the years I would have thought she’d naturally be speaking mostly Cantonese.

  • @vicwong3351
    @vicwong3351 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you!!!!!

  • @jame9200
    @jame9200 Před 2 lety +3

    finally i found the english name to my first language

  • @aznmmv00
    @aznmmv00 Před 2 lety +3

    Damn.... turns out whenever i speak Chinese, I use both Cantonese and Taishanese without realizing which one is which. No wonder people have a hard time understanding what I'm saying even though I can understand them.

    • @Weeping-Angel
      @Weeping-Angel Před 2 lety

      My grandparents do the same but I can understand. Thats why I can only understand some Taishanese when my friends speak it

  • @chan894ify
    @chan894ify Před 2 lety +1

    I grew up speaking both but since I’ve moved away from family in the Bay Area I speak both less but when I do visit family we end up speaking “Chinglish”, it’s also interesting that a village that’s about 30 miles from Toisan speaks a totally different dialect of Cantonese!

  • @Gunnar-Peterson
    @Gunnar-Peterson Před 7 měsíci

    Great video, things make a lot of sense after watching this video. I also find Jade much easier to listen to than most Taishanese speakers, I find a lot of Taishanese speakers have very pronounced and annoying inflections in their accent

  • @manalittlesis
    @manalittlesis Před 3 lety +8

    We need more videos like this promoting Toisanese dialect. I'm from Penang, Malaysia and what I can say, this dialect are almost gone in Malaysia. Even myself are very poor in Toisan wa 😞

    • @cantobritt
      @cantobritt  Před 3 lety +3

      I agree! You should check out her new channel “Taishanese stories with Jade”. She’s posting more Taishanese content there regularly :)

    • @tangtc60
      @tangtc60 Před 2 lety

      Ha ha didn’t know Penang Lang also got Toisan Ngen. I thought we are mostly in KL. 👏

    • @manalittlesis
      @manalittlesis Před 2 lety

      @@tangtc60 there's quite alot toisan ngen here. As you know, Penang lang speak Hokkien. So most of the toisan ngen here either speak in Hokkien or Cantonese when they're in public but they speak toisan wa with their family. I get to know this because I overheard some people converse in toisan wa and those among my friend, I'm the one that purposely speak toisan wa in front of them and found out.

    • @tangtc60
      @tangtc60 Před 2 lety

      @@manalittlesis guess I am like you. Heard enough from my senior cousins, uncles, father and grandparents to understand most of it naturally but spoke very little. I enjoy listening to them though. I am accustom to the way they sound and at times down right humourous jargon ie. like “heak loh !!” ( It is like you have high expectation and their sarcastic reply yah get to eat) 😂. Unfortunately most of them had passed away and the cousins seniors who are able to speak toisan wa married off and seldom meet. That’s is the reason I am tuning in to listen more and keep fresh in my mind. Keep up your Toisan Wa and pass it on if you can. 👏👍

    • @manalittlesis
      @manalittlesis Před 2 lety

      @@tangtc60 sadly my toisan wa are very bad. My grandparents and father never teach me. I only learned by hearing the elders conversation. Also toisan wa was on the verge of dying in Malaysia. Younger generation don't prefer to talk in toisan wa 😔