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Tea is another Hokkiens’ contribution to the world

ginfreely

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Triple confirmed! Wow I made such a big discovery on Hokkiens and tea from learning languages Spanish French German Malay etc. LOL

https://www.google.com.my/url?sa=i&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwjYwaWmmvPfAhUHgI8KHfMNAZoQzPwBegQIARAC&url=https://qz.com/1176962/map-how-the-word-tea-spread-over-land-and-sea-to-conquer-the-world/&psig=AOvVaw0Z_9xTw34cQlo0UoeexFYI&ust=1547759154947045

Tea if by sea, cha if by land: Why the world only has two words for tea
With a few minor exceptions, there are really only two ways to say “tea” in the world. One is like the English term— in Spanish and tee in Afrikaans are two examples. The other is some variation of cha, like chay in Hindi.
Both versions come from China. How they spread around the world offers a clear picture of how globalization worked before “globalization” was a term anybody used. The words that sound like “cha” spread across land, along the Silk Road. The “tea”-like phrasings spread over water, by Dutch traders bringing the novel leaves back to Europe.
tea-map1.png

The term cha (茶) is “Sinitic,” meaning it is common to many varieties of Chinese. It began in China and made its way through central Asia, eventually becoming “chay” (چای) in Persian. That is no doubt due to the trade routes of the Silk Road, along which, according to a recent discovery, tea was traded over 2,000 years ago. This form spread beyond Persia, becoming chayin Urdu, shay in Arabic, and chay in Russian, among others. It even made its way to sub-Saharan Africa, where it became chai in Swahili. The Japanese and Korean terms for tea are also based on the Chinese cha, though those languages likely adopted the word even before its westward spread into Persian.

But that doesn’t account for “tea.” The Chinese character for tea, 茶, is pronounced differently by different varieties of Chinese, though it is written the same in them all. In today’s Mandarin, it is chá. But in the Min Nan variety of Chinese, spoken in the coastal province of Fujian, the character is pronounced te. The key word here is “coastal.”

The te form used in coastal-Chinese languages spread to Europe via the Dutch, who became the primary traders of tea between Europe and Asia in the 17th century, as explained in the World Atlas of Language Structures. The main Dutch ports in east Asia were in Fujian and Taiwan, both places where people used the te pronunciation. The Dutch East India Company’s expansive tea importation into Europe gave us the French thé, the German Tee, and the English tea.

Yet the Dutch were not the first to Asia. That honor belongs to the Portuguese, who are responsible for the island of Taiwan’s colonial European name, Formosa. And the Portuguese traded not through Fujian but Macao, where chá is used. That’s why, on the map above, Portugal is a pink dot in a sea of blue.

A few languages have their own way of talking about tea. These languages are generally in places where tea grows naturally, which led locals to develop their own way to refer to it. In Burmese, for example, tea leaves are lakphak.

The map demonstrates two different eras of globalization in action: the millenia-old overland spread of goods and ideas westward from ancient China, and the 400-year-old influence of Asian culture on the seafaring Europeans of the age of exploration. Also, you just learned a new word in nearly every language on the planet.
All Hokkiens should know this! Such a BIG contribution to the world!
 

Sideswipe

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Hokkiens are great. the Hokkien dialect was apparently the official language of the mighty Tang and later Song dynasties, then the barbarians from outside the pass invaded China, and the Beijing dialect became the government language medium, and the dominant dialect of North China.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
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Hokkiens are great. the Hokkien dialect was apparently the official language of the mighty Tang and later Song dynasties, then the barbarians from outside the pass invaded China, and the Beijing dialect became the government language medium, and the dominant dialect of North China.
Yes such a wonderful Language...tat explains a lot about the state of the Tang n Song Dynasties.

 

ginfreely

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Hokkiens are great. the Hokkien dialect was apparently the official language of the mighty Tang and later Song dynasties, then the barbarians from outside the pass invaded China, and the Beijing dialect became the government language medium, and the dominant dialect of North China.
Ya you are absolutely right. I have been learning a bit of Japanese and the Kanji aka borrowed chinese characters in Japanese sound like a mix of Hokkien and Cantonese pronunciation to me.
 

ginfreely

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Hokkiens are great. the Hokkien dialect was apparently the official language of the mighty Tang and later Song dynasties, then the barbarians from outside the pass invaded China, and the Beijing dialect became the government language medium, and the dominant dialect of North China.
Oh ya I just read after that stupid Ming emperor took over from yuan dynasty, instead of following the Song and Tang court system he removed the prime minister 宰相role and further concentrated all the power onto the emperor himself. He was the worst tyrant!
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
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it was during the ming dynasty that china sent fleets of large treasure ships to the rest of the known world, short of europe. how could you blame the ming? the blame should rest squarely on court officials including finance minister who connived and convinced the retarded successor hongxi emperor (after the yongle emperor) to stop all voyages, garrison all existing ships in nanjing, and destroy almost all records including blueprints and plans for shipbuilding. during yongle reign, court officials were already against shipbuilding and voyages. the emperor refused to listen to these bozos advice and instead commanded the eunuchs and military to supervise shipbuilding. ruins and remains of giant docks where those ships were built can still be traced in zhejiang, jiangxi, huguang, nanjing, suzhou. shipbuilding was not done in fuckin alone.
 
Last edited:

AhMeng

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it was during the ming dynasty that china sent fleets of large treasure ships to the rest of the known world, short of europe. how could you blame the ming? the blame should rest squarely on court officials including finance minister who connived and convinced the retarded successor hongxi emperor (after the yongle emperor) to stop all voyages, burn all ships, and destroy almost all records including blueprints and plans for shipbuilding. during yongle reign, court officials were already against shipbuilding and voyages. the emperor refused to listen to these bozos advice and instead commanded the eunuchs and military to supervise shipbuilding. ruins and remains of giant docks where those ships were built can still be traced in zhejiang, jiangxi, huguang, nanjing, suzhou. shipbuilding was not done in fuckin alone.
Lol :biggrin:
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
it was during the ming dynasty that china sent fleets of large treasure ships to the rest of the known world, short of europe. how could you blame the ming? the blame should rest squarely on court officials including finance minister who connived and convinced the retarded successor hongxi emperor (after the yongle emperor) to stop all voyages, garrison all existing ships in nanjing, and destroy almost all records including blueprints and plans for shipbuilding. during yongle reign, court officials were already against shipbuilding and voyages. the emperor refused to listen to these bozos advice and instead commanded the eunuchs and military to supervise shipbuilding. ruins and remains of giant docks where those ships were built can still be traced in zhejiang, jiangxi, huguang, nanjing, suzhou. shipbuilding was not done in fuckin alone.
郑和下西洋was from hokkien port ok that was the centre of ship building since Song Dynasty time. Of course sea ban for 200 years after this 郑和下西洋thing affected hokkiens badly.
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
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郑和下西洋was from hokkien port ok that was the centre of ship building since Song Dynasty time. Of course sea ban for 200 years after this 郑和下西洋thing affected hokkiens badly.
because of the requirement to build hundreds of ships simultaneously, the ming eunuchs and military had to expand shipbuilding to other ports, not just xiamen and other fuking ports alone. part of the reason why coastal towns in fuking started building huge junks during song dynasty was because they were losing to mongols on land and had to resort to a sea exodus to islands off china including taiwan, okinawa, hainan, and some southern islands of japan. when mongols took over mainland china they pursued song remnants and survivors by sea and decimated them at sea off fuking province. fuking chinks helped the mongols to build ships to chase after song refugees in those islands. after building enough ships, mongols (yuan) decided to invade japan but failed, thanks to “divine wind” (kamikaze).
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
there was actually a last and final 6.9th voyage, and remnants of the treasure fleet that was holed up in nanjing as a naval garrison were allowed to sail during the reign of the xuande emperor, successor to the short-lived retarded hongxi emperor who was under the influence of ming court officials and being manipulated by them. ming court officials were inward looking and only wanted funds for their corrupt dealings within china. chinks should thank the yongle and xuande emperors of the ming dynasty for the 1st to 6th voyages (reign of yongle) and 6.9th voyage (reign of xuande). auntie (vir)gin knows jackshit about the history of ming china, or history in general. fuking province has been a place of refuge from northern wars and invasions (spring autumn period, warring states, three kingdoms, mongol invasion, manchu invasion, jap invasion, civil war between commies and nationalists) for generations, and losers keep cumming to fuking to escape to islands off china. basically it’s a last resort for hopeless survival and a dreaded bastion for losers and the sexterminated. in other words losers of wars in china cum to fuking to die, if not to escape with tails and shrunken balls tucked between legs for men and may be hymen intact for women to taiwan first then further to any other island that can give them refuge. between xiamen and qinmen is a watery graveyard.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Another contribution by fuckeins n Fuckkas...these ppl cause problems where ever they go...this might be a village in Guangdong province..but they are not Cantonese...


China executes 'godfather of crystal meth' Cai Dongjia whose village supplied one-third of the country's methamphetamine
UPDATED ABOUT 10 HOURS AGO
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Policemen carry buckets of crystal meth down a narrow street during a raid.
PHOTO Cai Dongjia went on trial in 2016 and was found to have manufactured and sold 180 kilograms of crystal meth.
REUTERS: STRINGER
Cai Dongjia, the 55-year-old Communist Party chief of a Chinese village once notorious for its drug production has been executed, Chinese state media reports.

Key points:
Police say 20 per cent of the households in Boshe were involved in producing crystal meth
Cai was captured in a 2013 paramilitary raid when 3,000 police arrested 180 suspects
He was sentenced to death in 2016 for making and selling drugs and harbouring criminals
What happens when you use ice?

Ice has been called the most dangerous and destructive drug of our time. But what exactly does it do to your body?
State media called Cai "the godfather" of his village, Boshe, in the Lufeng area in the southern province of Guangdong, which supplied more than one-third of the country's crystal meth.

According to Xinhua news agency, during his six-year tenure as the party chief of Boshe, Cai used his power as the area's most senior official to produce drugs and provide protection for local dealers.

Chinese authorities said 20 per cent of the village's households were involved in the production of the drug.

Cai was captured in December 2013 during an elite paramilitary police raid in which 3,000 police officers arrested 182 suspects from 18 different drug rings and seized three tonnes of crystal meth, more than half a tonne of ketamine and 23 tonnes of raw materials.

He went on trial in 2016, where he was found to have manufactured and sold 180 kilograms of crystal meth.

The court also ruled that he tried to bribe police to free other traffickers the police department had arrested.

Cai was sentenced to death for smuggling and manufacturing drugs and harbouring criminals.

His appeal was ultimately dismissed.

POSTED YESTERDAY AT 12:17PM
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Lufeng, Guangdong
Lufeng, formerly romanized as Lukfung,[a] is a county-level city in the southeast of Guangdong province, administered as a part of the prefecture-level city of Shanwei. It lies on the mainland on coast of the South China Sea east of Hong Kong.

Lufeng
陆丰市
County-level & Sub-prefectural city
The entrance to Xuanwu Mountain in Jieshi
The entrance to Xuanwu Mountain in Jieshi
Lufeng is located in GuangdongLufengLufeng
Location in Guangdong
Coordinates: 22°55′08″N 115°39′08″E
Country
People's Republic of China
Province
Guangdong
Prefecture-level city
Shanwei
Time zone
UTC+8 (China Standard)
Lufeng
Simplified Chinese
陆丰
Traditional Chinese
陸豐
Hanyu Pinyin
Lùfēng
Cantonese Yale
Luhkfūng
Postal
Lukfung
Literal meaning
Continent Abundance[clarification needed]
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin Lùfēng
Gwoyeu Romatzyh Luhfeng
Wade–Giles Lu4-fêng1
IPA [lû.fə́ŋ]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanization Luhkfūng
IPA [lòk̚.fóŋ]
Jyutping Luk6fung1
History Edit
Under the Qing, the area was known as Lufeng County. Together with neighboring Haifeng, it formed the short-lived Hailufeng Soviet in 1927. It was later promoted to county-level city status.

The area rose to prominence in the early 21st century as a scene of unrest. Jieshi saw serious inter-village violence over road use in October 2009 and March 2010[4] and, in September 2011, a series of protests or riots occurred in Wukan Village over allegations of Communist Party members unfairly selling farmers' land for development.[5] Fresh protests broke out in December, when one of the village leaders died in the police custody. The police blocked the roads leading to the village.[6]

Administration Edit
As of 2005 year's end, the city comprises three urban subdistricts and 17 towns. These are organised into 47 neighbourhood committees and 280 village committees.[7]

The city's executive, legislature and judiciary are located in the Donghai Subdistrict (东海街道), together with the CPC subbranch and PSB suboffice. Wukan Village, site of the Wukan protests, is also located in the Donghai subdistrict.

Urban subdistricts Edit
Donghai (东海)
Chengdong (城东)
Hexi (河西)
Towns Edit
Jieshi (碣石)
Qiaochong (桥冲)
Bomei (博美)
Jiazi (甲子)
Jiadong (甲东)
Jiaxi (甲西镇)
Hudong (湖东)
Beiyang (陂洋)
Nantang (南塘)
Bawan (八万)
Tanxi (潭西)
Da'an (大安)
Jinxiang (金厢)
Neihu (内湖)
Xinan (西南)
Shangying (上英)
Hedong (河东)
Demography Edit
Lufeng has a population of 1.7 million,[8] the majority of which are of Hoklo heritage; the rest are Teochews, Hakka and Ming Dynasty Jianghuai military speakers. Therefore, dialects of both Min Nan, Teochew and Hakka are spoken, in addition to Mandarin, which is used in official and public life. The Hailufeng dialect, however, only refers to the Hokkien variant.

Climate Edit
Climate data for Lufeng (1981−2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 28.7
(83.7) 29.4
(84.9) 30.2
(86.4) 32.5
(90.5) 34.1
(93.4) 36.0
(96.8) 37.8
(100.0) 37.0
(98.6) 36.6
(97.9) 34.7
(94.5) 32.7
(90.9) 29.3
(84.7) 37.8
(100.0)
Average high °C (°F) 19.9
(67.8) 19.7
(67.5) 21.9
(71.4) 25.5
(77.9) 28.5
(83.3) 30.5
(86.9) 31.9
(89.4) 32.1
(89.8) 31.2
(88.2) 29.2
(84.6) 25.9
(78.6) 21.7
(71.1) 26.5
(79.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 14.7
(58.5) 15.2
(59.4) 17.9
(64.2) 21.7
(71.1) 25.0
(77.0) 27.3
(81.1) 28.4
(83.1) 28.3
(82.9) 27.1
(80.8) 24.3
(75.7) 20.5
(68.9) 16.2
(61.2) 22.2
(72.0)
Average low °C (°F) 11.3
(52.3) 12.4
(54.3) 15.1
(59.2) 19.1
(66.4) 22.3
(72.1) 24.8
(76.6) 25.5
(77.9) 25.4
(77.7) 24.1
(75.4) 20.9
(69.6) 16.8
(62.2) 12.5
(54.5) 19.2
(66.5)
Record low °C (°F) 2.6
(36.7) 3.9
(39.0) 2.8
(37.0) 9.6
(49.3) 14.4
(57.9) 18.6
(65.5) 21.8
(71.2) 21.7
(71.1) 17.9
(64.2) 11.6
(52.9) 6.2
(43.2) 1.0
(33.8) 1.0
(33.8)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 29.6
(1.17) 63.6
(2.50) 112.9
(4.44) 158.5
(6.24) 262.9
(10.35) 440.1
(17.33) 329.6
(12.98) 352.9
(13.89) 199.8
(7.87) 34.1
(1.34) 26.6
(1.05) 28.3
(1.11) 2,038.9
(80.27)
Average relative humidity (%) 73 78 82 83 84 86 84 84 80 74 71 69 79
Source: China Meteorological Data Service Center
See also Edit
Boshe, a village in Jiaxi
Notes
References
Last edited 1 day ago by an anonymous user
RELATED ARTICLES
Donghai
Disambiguation page providing links to topics that could be referred to by the same search term

List of township-level divisions of Jiangsu
Wikimedia list article

Wukan
Village in Guangdong, People's Republic of China

Wikipedia
Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
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Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
because of the requirement to build hundreds of ships simultaneously, the ming eunuchs and military had to expand shipbuilding to other ports, not just xiamen and other fuking ports alone. part of the reason why coastal towns in fuking started building huge junks during song dynasty was because they were losing to mongols on land and had to resort to a sea exodus to islands off china including taiwan, okinawa, hainan, and some southern islands of japan. when mongols took over mainland china they pursued song remnants and survivors by sea and decimated them at sea off fuking province. fuking chinks helped the mongols to build ships to chase after song refugees in those islands. after building enough ships, mongols (yuan) decided to invade japan but failed, thanks to “divine wind” (kamikaze).
Have to admit, it was bcos of the cina who helped the Mongols build the ships to invade the nips tat cause the down fall of the yuan dynasty. 2 invasions which failed weaken the Mongol dynasty n in the end were overthrown by the chinks. Too bad the chinks later got conquered by the Manchurians because of the corruption n incompetence of the Ming.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
there was actually a last and final 6.9th voyage, and remnants of the treasure fleet that was holed up in nanjing as a naval garrison were allowed to sail during the reign of the xuande emperor, successor to the short-lived retarded hongxi emperor who was under the influence of ming court officials and being manipulated by them. ming court officials were inward looking and only wanted funds for their corrupt dealings within china. chinks should thank the yongle and xuande emperors of the ming dynasty for the 1st to 6th voyages (reign of yongle) and 6.9th voyage (reign of xuande). auntie (vir)gin knows jackshit about the history of ming china, or history in general. fuking province has been a place of refuge from northern wars and invasions (spring autumn period, warring states, three kingdoms, mongol invasion, manchu invasion, jap invasion, civil war between commies and nationalists) for generations, and losers keep cumming to fuking to escape to islands off china. basically it’s a last resort for hopeless survival and a dreaded bastion for losers and the sexterminated. in other words losers of wars in china cum to fuking to die, if not to escape with tails and shrunken balls tucked between legs for men and may be hymen intact for women to taiwan first then further to any other island that can give them refuge. between xiamen and qinmen is a watery graveyard.
Or they end up in Singkieland n either be an LKY or an Auntie Gin or the resident commie dog Mr Waiting To Be Fucked
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Or they end up in Singkieland n either be an LKY or an Auntie Gin or the resident commie dog Mr Waiting To Be Fucked
a reason why fuckinese kpkb so much, plus daily cursing and swearing about their mothers' genitalia. everyday fuking is invaded by losers, refugees, bandits, plunderers, rapists or barbarians.
 

musashi

Alfrescian
Loyal

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