Wednesday, June 11, 2008

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 24th April 2008, 03:35 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Rumor has it that some people live outside of China.

@Heifeng - no idea, sorry.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 31st March 2008, 01:34 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Once a new member has made a few posts that have made it through the moderation process - ie
they're not spamming or posting incoherent nonsense, etc - they'll be given full access to all
forums,...

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 31st March 2008, 01:22 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Also, bear in mind that the News forum is not open to new members.

If they're on a university network they may be subject to the university's own limits, as well as
general Internet ones. Given the...

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 31st March 2008, 11:40 AM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Some of you may have been having issues related to this
(http://www. From Beijing Chinese School Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Because I'm only wrong 90% of the time. And the last nine problems were my fault. Hence . . .

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 25th March 2008, 08:03 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Oh well, looks like there was some problem then. But I'm fairly sure it wasn't my fault . . .

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 25th March 2008, 01:48 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

Hmmm, what error messages were you getting?

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 25th March 2008, 12:10 PM

Replies: 24

Chinese Forums Blocked???

Views: 939

Posted By roddy

Re: Chinese Forums Blocked???

No other reports, and I can see people from a few different locations in China online. I'd be
inclined to suggest network / dns issues somewhere along the line. Don't touch anything for ten
minutes,...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Learn Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 6th May 2008, 03:11 PM

Replies: 4

'a language of xxx' generalizations

Views: 266

Posted By simonlaing

Re: 'a language of xxx' generalizations

Shanghainese: a language of haggling
Beijinghua : a language of pirates, (or politics) Arrr
sichuanese : a language of spice

hehe,
have fun,
SimoN:)

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Forum: Other cultures and language 16th August 2006, 02:56 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By LoudSilence

Time for a post revival. I can speak English,...

Time for a post revival.

I can speak English, Arabic, Urdu (basic), Chinese (learning), and I knew some Spanish once upon a
time. I'm aiming to learn Korean, Japanese, Malaysian, and Indonesian,...

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Chinese School - A serious question: religion? - Page 17 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Society

A serious question: religion?
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elina -

Quote:

I believe that within a person's capacity, that person should never stop asking questions and
never stop thinking critically,

I totally agree with you.

Quote:

True things are not always beautiful and beautiful things are not always true.

Again i agree with you. That's said in Dao De Jing:
信 言 不 美 , 美 言 不 信 。
Sincere words are not fine; fine words are not sincere.

i have alread begun my reading on Buddhism a little a week, i will think carefully, and will not
let my explanation on Pure Land in Buddhism come out before next year. Because when i begun to
read, i know it IS NOT an easy thing to truly understand it, but it is pretty interesting.

Recently, i saw a setence: 差异是学习的资源 / the difference is the resource of studying,
i like it, i will continue my studying in this small thread on discussing the difference between
Christianity and Buddhism, also in next year.

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tanklao -

God helps only those who help themselves.
It's stupid to think that God helps those who believe in him. Yeah I have to admit that sometimes
it works if you believe in God. But this is due to psychology rather than to the God. As far as I
know, Budha works as well as Juses.

rezaf -

Well I think that the God of Abrahamic religions is a very powerful God. Praying to him has
miraculously helped me at difficult stages of my life. However Abrahamic religions are very
anti-wisdom and promote believing without experiencing. Now I am reading and practicing stuff
about Daoism and Buddhism and I think that combining my birth religion Islam with teachings of
more practical religions like Daoism and Buddhism works very well

shazan -

Hi all, I saw some misconception about Islam being talked here, and I wanted to clearify them. And
ofcourse, my appologies in advance if I offended anybody.

In Islam, God is considered to be the essence, the first being, the first intellect, the creater
etc. He doesnt have to come down to manifest himself, because as he says, he is nearer to man than
his jugler vein. And also, he doesnt beget a son. The word Allah comes from Al & Ilah, meaning the
diety. It has the same root as the hebrew El, pronounced as El, Ella, Eloh, Elohim & Eloi in the
bible. He is the God of Abraham, Moses, Jesus & Muhammad. Arabs had known him as the god who
talked to their father Abraham. Moon God theory is a recent invention, by a Christian missionary
known as Robert Morey, who has been refuted.

Now Allah says that he sends a guide to every nation. By name only 25 are mentioned in the Quran,
but there is a saying of Prophet Muhammad that 124000 prophets were send before him. Islam sees
itself as the culmination point of the convent that God made with Abraham, that God will send a
guide to all mankind from his offsprings. A guide that will give people the good news, warn them
of an afterlife, & purify them.

The Abrahamic tradition through Issac continued till Jesus. Out of all the jewish prophes, nobody
ever said anything about God begeting a son, or coming down to earth, not even Jesus. After Jesus,
under the influence of Greek opression & philosophy, the teachings of Jewish Jesus were slowly
transformed into very greekified teachings/theology of a mythical Christ. A man-god character,
likes of which were predominant in that part of the world. Under the influence of Constantine,
trinity was made the "official creed", & "other christianities" slowly went extinct. The NT books
were also written under varying influence of greek culture. Thats why we see a stark difference
between Mathew's human Jesus & John's God Jesus. The authors wrote about the Christ character in
such a way that it fits in the rather ambigious verses from the OT. The NT cannon was set much
later, & there wasent much logic behind the inclusion or exclusion of books that got included or
excluded. Thanks to this, there are thousands of errors & contradictions in it.

The Abrahamic tradition through Ishmael ended at Muhammad, this time the convent was between God &
humanity.

The word Jihad means struggle. From Islam's point of view, its a struggle against injustice,
inside one's self or outside it.

"There are no provisions for women, no hope for women" is another misconception. Islam sees women
as equal to men, but not identical.

Muslims dont consider reading bible a sin. Its just that bible more or less has only a historical
significance for them.

Walid Shoebat is a charltan. I am amazed that a palestenian would side with Zionist occupants &
turn a blind eye towards the suffering of his own people, who were murdered/terrorised & thrown
out of their land. They included both Christians & Muslims. And the struggleof Palestine is a
political one, not religious. Its about a piece of land that was invaded & occupied by Europeans.

There are many reachable Muslim scholars who converted from Christianity. If you are interested,
you can read Gai Eaton, Martin Lings, Nuh Keller, Hamza Yusuf, Yusuf Estes etc.

To see some comparative study between Chinese philosophy & Islam read the following links.
http://www.ibnarabisociety.org/artic...fucianism.html
{An article about Lin Chih's Islamic neoconfucianism by Sachiko Murata.)
http://abuzuhri.blogspot.com/2007/05...-in-china.html
http://www.islamicity.com/forum/foru...s.asp?TID=9198
BY Abu Zhulixin al-Hakkawi

Other books written on this subjest include The Black Pearl: Spiritual Illumination in Sufism and
East Asian Philosophies by Henry Bayman , Chinese Gleams of Sufi Light by Sachiko Murata, & The
Dao of Muhammad by Zvi Ben-Dor Benite

I will be delighted to answer if anybody has any questions.

Take care...peace !

shazan -

Sorry, that last link got accidentally added, there is nothing much to read there.

rezaf -

Very good information. I don't want to criticize you because most of things you said are just
documented information. But you make it look like too western style civilized and having seen that
I want to add some of my personal views. There is a whole bigger dark side of Islam which gives
humans extra reasons to kill each other and has caused so much bloodshed amongst Muslims and other
people so far. It is an old way of thinking which was very advanced for it's own time but belongs
to the time that all one nation wanted was to suppress other nations, to take booties from them
and to make their people slaves. Regardless of the parts that are compatible to today's civilized
manners, the basic theory in Islam is: "Islam makes people free from tyranny. Those who are not
Muslim are automatically living under tyranny, so Muslims should occupy their lands and help them
get their freedom. They either become Muslims or they have to pay Muslims for their lives and
under pressure they eventually become Muslims."
Islam has interesting insights in human ethics and law but a lot of things are just in theory
however the more apparent side of Islam is how it easily allows violence and we see how Muslims
divided after the prophet died and have been killing each other and others from then on, and each
group can easily find enough excuses to kill other groups. Islam doesn't talk about justice and
brotherhood for mankind but talks about justice and brotherhood only for Muslims(and thats why
Muslims have been so kind to force others to convert to Islam), but in practice even this one has
never had much success, Muslims still lie to each other and cheat as before.

And do you really believe that the conflict in Palestine is just political?????? Maybe you should
tell it to Hamas and Hezbollah and see how they react. The political side of this conflict is lost
in piles of religious stuff. When it comes to Muslims and Jews everything is religious.

tooironic -

I'll let someone else do the debating for me.
"The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weakness, the Bible
a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish." -
albert einstein

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Chinese Studies - Best of Chinese Study Tools - Page 9 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Wikis > Guide to Chinese

Best of Chinese Study Tools
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renzhe -

I've added the HSK vocabulary files for Mnemosyne/Anki, KVoctrain/Parley, Supermemo and in the
universal TSV format.

The question comes up all the time.

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Chinese Class - BLCU Housing Info, what I know - Page 13 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools > Studying

Chinese in Beijing
BLCU Housing Info, what I know
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gablaze23 -

Thanks. I've seen those pics some time ago. Any others??

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BLCUP -

i am a blcu staff

eddie9684 -

Quote:

i am a blcu staff

nice, any recommendation ?

George--- -

What are the rates for dorm 17?

raymond23 -

I've got a video showing my room in BLCU's Conference Center.
Also I'm going to goto my friends room at Dorm 17 and I'm going to record that and upload to my
account soon.
http://youtube.com/user/RayisLost

As far as I know... rooms @ Dorm 17 is around 100rmb/day.
This is from my friends that are living @ Dorm 17 currently.

I'm living at the conference center and I'm paying around 120rmb/day but thats with a three month
stay discount. They also have a half a year discount which I think is 110rmb/day.
So that might be a choice for you guys.

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - classic chinese/cutural references still used/ other curiosities of 汉语 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

classic chinese/cutural references still used/ other curiosities of 汉语
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Kimosabe -

Do you have any good examples of remains of classical chinese or other pop-cultural references
used in modern chinese?Or just weird things? Id like to expand my vocabulary with words that may
sound weird but can be used jokingly, or that display an aspect of chinese culture. I know, this
sounds confusing so I'll come with some examples:

1: self deprecating first person pronouns. (instead of using 我)
在下, 不才, dialect words for 我,like 俺
Extremly polite stuff like 何足挂齿 (hardly worth mentioning) or another saying wich is
"showing your incompetance" always made my teacher laugh when I did a mistake. Good thing to know:P

2. historical references
西施 famous beauty in chinese history, great line to pick up girls
伏羲 famous genious

3. dialect words that would be known to most of chinese, stereotypes, etc
beijings, northchinas 哥们儿!apperantly people from song are the sterotypical stupid person
in china? like polish jokes in the west. any chinese feel free to correct me.
weird canton characters like mao3 that means 没有

4. popculture references like 吃人社会, eat people society from luxuns madman diary.
望梅止渴 hoping peaches stop the thirst, wane hope for something that won't happen. Cao Cao
used this to motivate his troops, reference to romance of three kingdoms

5. weird sayings, like dong zhuo from romance of three kingdoms, saying
顺我者昌,逆我者亡 those who follow me will prosper, those who offend me will die. easy
to remeber is good.

6. Chengyus with long explanations and useless meanings; 满门抄斩, pillage a house and kill
all it's inhabitants.

Think of all the funny and weird stuff you have come across studying chinese and post it here!

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tooironic -

Oh yes I think we're kinda similiar, as I also like to collect 'weird' Chinese sayings,
references, etc.

My favourites:

PK就PK - "Player Killing" is nothing - really hard to translate!
我是看蹭票的 - I never buy a ticket - used to let someone know that you always get into
concerts, plays, etc for free
八成是不行了 - It doesn't look good - literally "the [bad] result is at least eighty percent
assured"
墙里开花墙外香 - The blooming flower within the wall exudes its fragrance beyond - it
refers to the phenomenon that if something is too close to you, you cannot fully appreciate or
understand it
吃什么醋啊 - Why are you so jealous? - love how they envisage that jealousy is like eating
vinegar (醋) :P
破财免灾 or 折财人安 - A loss of wealth is a gain of health
郁闷 - means "sulk!" as an exclamation, again, hard to translate into English...

I got some of those from the book Popular Chinese Expressions, Latest Edition published by
Sinolingua. It's a really fascinating book on Chinese colloqualisms, and although it has some
translation errors (though most Chinese texts do), it's a really good read.

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Speak Chinese - Liam = 利亚姆? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Liam = 利亚姆?
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fanglu -

Hi everyone,

I was writing out some names for friends from 世界人名翻译大辞典, but it has 利亚姆
for Liam, which seems a bit weird for a boys name. Opinions?

Luke

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muyongshi -

Reference 萨达姆 (Sadaam Hussein)

I assume your problem is the 女字旁

fanglu -

Quote:

Reference 萨达姆 (Sadaam Hussein)

Ahh. Point taken.

Quote:

I assume your problem is the 女字旁

Well, the 姆 anyway. I had a (male) friend who's name had 丹 in it and he was always getting
weird looks when he told people.

Lu -

Quote:

I had a (male) friend who's name had 丹 in it and he was always getting weird looks when he told
people.

I had a female classmate named 丹, but on the other hand there's 王丹. Don't know if he ever
got weird looks.

That 姆 is in other boys' names as well, like 湯姆 for Tom, seems it's more foreign than it is
female. Anyway I don't suppose your friend would mind too much if he doesn't know Chinese. If it's
just for private use (and not for in the newspaper or for on a businesscard or anything), you
could just go ahead and make your own transliteration with a less feminine mu, like 木 or 穆.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Business license - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

Business license
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Page 2 of 2 < 1 2

imron -

It's fake. This page lets you check the 进出口企业代码 (import and export enterprise code)
of a Chinese company, and no company exists with the number: 0012811999018. In addition, the
import and export enterprise code for any Beijing company will begin with 1100, which is not true
for this company. Finally, business names need to begin with the location where they are
registered. This so if this was a legitimate company it would need to be called something like
北京华海科技国际贸易有限公司 (Beijing Huahai Keji.....), and not just
华海科技国际贸易有限公司 (Huahai Keji ....)

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gougou -

Also, the address says 国贸大楼. While some people might refer to it that way, this certainly
is not the official way of referring to the World Trade Center.

self-taught-mba -

Now quickly arrange a meeting and record everything.

gato -

Interesting that they've stopped taking Paypal.

Quote:

http://amazon999.com/info.asp?id=3
Dear friend:
Because using the payment of PAYPAL lasts for a long time, the products on on our webs were
cheated to take is excessive.A time just in the adjustment, during the period of adjustment
temporary not accept the payment of PAYPAL.

Remember this thread?
http://www. From Beijing Chinese School/showthread.php?t=17545
Does this mean PayPal discriminates against Chinese people?

Lessa&Merino -

Thank you everyone for your help, now i'm ready to put that men in his place

Lessa&Merino -

HI, everyone i got to other people who wants to make deal but one give me the licence business
with the website, the other just give the website but i forgot to ask the license busines, what
i'm going to do next after this.

Please help me, someone give the page to check if the business license is fake or not
but i dont know how it works!!!!!!!!!!!

http://lic.ec.com.cn:6804/index1.htm

here is the website with the license business, tell what you think about it i really want to start
the compane next week if possible : http://www.electronsupplier.com/nsort.asp?bookid=4

Here is the website of the other company: http://huyi.ecvv.com/

monto -

Quote:

Here is the website of the other company: http://huyi.ecvv.com/

For this company, you can search by name, and input "厦门+互+进出口" in the website
http://lic.ec.com.cn:6804/index1.htm

My search gives only one company name but not this one, they are called Hu Xin not Huyi.

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Chinese School - TOEFL in Beijing - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Extras > Other cultures and language

TOEFL in Beijing
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backstreet girl -

hello everyone..I'm planing to participate in the TOEFl exam here in Beijing .. but I wanna know
when will it be?where can I register?how much will it costs?? plz if u guys know any information
just tell me ,, it's urgent! THANKS

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yonglin -

The TOEFL is administered by the ETS in the US. You can register on their Chinese website.

As far as I can see, the test fee is 1370 RMB (I believe they have flat pricing no matter where in
the world you take it).

BLCUP -

08年TOEFL报名是一下子把全年的名额都发放出来,现在很多的地方都没有空余
的位置了,依地方而定,考位查询看:
http://toefl.etest.net.cn/cn 点“考生须知”;
一般可以在考前一两周报名,这时候经常有人退考或者考场临时加考位,但�
��前一周报名会加收手续费。

地址栏一行就写你能收到信的地址就行了,网上购物的那个地址可以,如果�
��没有在考试时加送成绩单,这行则没有什么用,只是在后来你TOEFL送到学校
后ETS会给你发个信件到你填的这个地址,说明已经把你的成绩寄到申请的学�
��去了。因此地址栏这一行并不重要。

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Definitive Guide to Studying in Beijing [UPDATED 4/11/2005] - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools > Studying

Chinese in Beijing
Definitive Guide to Studying in Beijing [UPDATED 4/11/2005]
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ChouDoufu -

6/20/05 added juncheng & Direct Apply vs. Worldlink Section
4/11/05 added IUP @ Tsinghua info
3/6/05 added BNU info

Tired of answering the same questions I've decided to post this, the Definitive Guide to Studying
in Beijing. I haven't studied everywhere in Beijing, but I have studied for a while, which makes
me more of an expert than most. I will fill in details as I have time. please PM me with details
or with questions you want answered. I will try to add some sections on studying at Tsinghua,
Beida and at Private schools when I have some free time. If someone could send me info about
studying at a university and impressions they had, please do so. thanks!!

I'd also like to add some thoughts about finding a good place to study. When studying Chinese, I
think the following factors should be considered: the quality of teachers, the quality of
materials, class size, school environment, costs. Of these I think teaching quality is extremely
important. Even if a school is considered the best in the country, that doesn't mean their Chinese
teachers are any good. Be aware of this.

Universities:

Most schools still use BLCU materials (with Tsinghua (for the most part) and beida being an
exception)

BLCU (Beijing Language and Culture University) aka. BLU (Beijing Language
University)北京语言大学

Classes are generally in the morning Monday through Friday, 8-12 for short term students and
8:30-12:30 for long term students. Intensive classes have an additional 2 hours a day from 2-4.
Optional classes are available, including tai-chi, calligraphy, HSK prep, etc. There is one
excursion (free) to the great wall. There are two types of courses, short term and long term. If
you want to get there by taxi, you may have to say the schools old name Yuyan Xueyuan
(语言学院).

Short Term: 4 week($420), 5 and 6 week($500,580), 12 week $1000,$1500[30hr/wk], 20 week
($1400,$2300[30hr/wk]) courses diveded into 8 levels (from beginner to advanced) A, B, B+,C, C+,
D, D+,E. Students are placed by testing(essentially an unofficial HSK) unless they identify
themselves as zero-level (no knowledge or little knowledge). A is for zero-level students. The
levels get increasingly difficult, but most levels have a combination of Comprehensive Chinese
(综合), Listening Comprehension(听力), and Spoken Chinese(口语). At D, students also
study Newspapers/journal reading (报刊). [can anyone tell me what levels A, C and E study).
C+ and D+ use different materials (possibly experimental materials) and are more difficult than C
and D. I'd consider textbooks for B to be a little behind the times.

Students are predominantly Korean (60-85%), Japanese (15-35%), Thai or Indonesian. Westerners are
a definite minority. There is no official interaction or activities between short term students
and chinese students on campus. One advantage of the short term courses is you can jump a level
(or more) if you study hard. In a one year course you'd be locked into the year regardless of how
much progress you made.

Long Term: 1 year ($2800, $3000[caligraphy&painting]: two 20 week semesters). This course is
offered through the Advanced Studies department (进修院) and is similar to their
undergraduate levels. Students take a placement test at the beginning of the first semester and
are placed in the either the first or second semester of years 1-3 (2nd year would be equivalent
to level D in the short term classes). There are different levels of 1st year, but I'm not sure
how they work [anyone know?]. 1st year is basic language, but uses different text books than those
used for short term students; textbooks are the same as used by the foreign students majoring in
chinese. Starting in the second year, students are allowed select electives for a total to meet
their total of 22 hours. Most electives are with other Long Term students, but some may be taken
with Undergrad students. Electives are not the same as electives for undergraduate (eg.
中国国情is split into two types, cultural and economic. )Another long term option would be
to enroll as an undergraduate. The testing process would be the same, but the students would be
different. Most long term students leave after 1 year, but undergrads would be around longer.
Class times vary with the courses you select, but for 1st year they are all 8-12 (or 9-1pm since
Nov08/2004) and are mostly in the morning for 2nd year. 3rd year is more varied. Students are more
varied here with a higher percentage of westerners. The students that I've met seem to be more
serious about studying, so that's a plus, too.

Brought to you by Zhende ma? a BNU review (please send in reviews of places you've studied)
BNU (Beijing Normal University) a.k.a 北京师范大学 , 北师大, BeiShiDa

Classes are generally two hours a day blocked either in the mornings or afternoons. There are four
levels with three classes in each level. For example, in level 1 there is 100, 101, and 102 in
order of increasing skill. You are placed in classes by a placement test which is very similar to
the HSK including an oral test. However, you have the option to move down a class or test up into
a higher class if you feel you were incorrectly classified. Morning classes are from 8-12 and
afternoon classes are from 1-4:30. Optional classes are available. There are scheduled activities
roughly once a month. For example there is a Chinese Folk Music Concert, trip to the Great Wall
(not free), Beijing Opera, etc. Between semesters there are larger trips like excursions to
Harbin, Hainan, Xian, etc.

Types of classes include Chinese listening (听力), reading and writing (读写), conversation
(会话), and newspaper/magazine comprehension (报刊).

Short Term: I can't tell you much about this since I haven't attended, however, the price is
US$390 for 3 weeks, 450 for 4 weeks, 545 for 5 weeks. You must have your application in by June 30.

Long Term: 1 year ($1400 for one semester; $2700 for two)
Application deadlines fall semester: May 30, winter semester: December 15.

BeiShiDa is located in North Beijing near the third ring road in the Haidian district. BeiShiDa is
conveniently located on several major bus lines as well as a 10 minute walk from the Jishuitan
subway station making transporation easy. For the foreign Chinese learner, however, the largest
advantage may be its comparatively smaller foreign element. I would estimate several hundred
students (I don't have an exact number). 90%+ are Japanese and Korean and the rest are from US,
Europe, Australia, and Africa. The general area has almost no other foreigners and few English
speakers apart from University students making speaking Chinese a daily necessity. However, the
expat areas of Wudaokou and Chaoyang are still easily accessible. The program and the
administration are very well organized. Like most universities you have a foreigners-only dorm and
cafeteria but you can mix with the regular Chinese students with minimal effort. Beishida
specializes in teaching education studies, however, there are many more students and majors here.
I would recommend this to anyone looking at a university off the beaten path of typical Beijing
universities like BLCU, Beijing University, and Tsinghua.
(choudoufu's note: I've heard more and more good things about Beishida as time goes by. In
contrast to bigger name schools like Beida (which I've heard described as terrible by some current
students), Beishida students are usually happy with their choice.

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roddy -

Please do NOT post questions in this thread - post them as a new topic, and if necessary the
answers can be edited and placed in here.

ChouDoufu -

(because of character count, I have seperated the post)
Inter University Program @ Tsinghua University a.k.a IUP

please note that I have not attended IUP, and derive my information from various people who I've
met in the program.

IUP is an extremely distinguished program created by Berkeley University and currently being run
by Tsinghua University (It was previously in Taiwan). This program is reknowned for it rigor, for
the high level of chinese proficiency students achieve upon completion of the course and the
incredibly low student to teacher ratio (guaranteed at 1:3).

IUP offers three different courses, a 32 week academic year course for $13,000US, a 16 week
semester course for $7,000US, and an 8 week intensive summer course for $4,000. This does not
include housing, textbooks or other various expenses.

At these prices, IUP is considerably more expensive than any schools. Students at IUP are
generally westerners, some established business people sent by their companies to study Chinese,
and some are students who have just graduated from University. What they all share is a desire to
learn Chinese well in a small, structured, rigorous environment.

Students are given a placement test before the course starts and administered an HSK upon
completing the course. Classes are 4 hours a day (8:00-12:00) and consist of private tutorial
classes and small group classes (3 students). Currently IUP has 30 teachers and 50 students, a
ratio that maximizes a students time with teachers. The program is considered very difficult and
teachers give 5-8 hours of homework each day. Students have generally remarked that there is a lot
of pressure to complete the homework and without completing the homework you would fall behind in
the class.

Many students mantion that they have no time to do anything except for study Chinese. They don't
get into the robust lifestyle of Beijing as much as students from other schools can or don't have
contact with everyday Chinese people. This goes to the core of the IUP programs greatest strength
and weakness. Nobody denies the level of accomplishment IUP graduates have, but that achievement
is at the sacrifice of being able to go out and discover Chinese culture for oneself. There are
usually a few people who drop out of IUP in order to have more time to explore China and Beijing.

Teachers are generally young, in their mid 20's, and there is an extremely high turnover rate
(I've heard numbers as high as 80% teacher turnover rate), so many of the teachers are teaching at
IUP for their first (and possibly only) year. The reasons for this high turnoever are twofold: 1)
teachers are trained extremely well, so they are able to find other Chinese teaching jobs quickly;
2) teacher are not paid extremely well, this causes them to want to find a new job quickly.

Textbooks are made in house exclusively for the IUP program (I haven't seen these materials, so I
can't comment on them).

IMHO, IUP will help students achieve a level of Chinese far higher much faster than other schools
in Beijing. But that level comes at two costs; it is expensive, more than 2 times the cost of
BLCU, Tsinghua or Beida; and it requires a lot of study time, so you won't be able to have as much
as a life as those who study elsewhere.

Private Schools:

Private schools are an option for people who want flexibility. Studying at a private school allows
students to study for a short period (as short as two weeks), variable hours as little as one
class a day (or as much as you want), all for a lower price (in most cases) than a university
would offer. There are language schools across Beijing, but there is a concentration of them in
the Wudaokou area near Tsinghua, BLCU and Beida. The most “famous" language school would
probably be Global Village (地球村) but there are many more including ECC [and a bunch of other
places whose names I will try to find out].

Global Village (地球村)(site in KOREAN, no English)

Costs 12yuan/hr - 15yuan/hr. The typical class is two hours and meets 5 days a week, but there are
weekend (Business Chinese)only or meet once a week (Caligraphy). Students typically register
every two weeks (you can register for a longer period if you'd like) and choose their own level.
Classes have different sections taught by different teachers on different timelines (eg. In two
beginner classes one might be studying lesson one and one might be studying lesson 5) This allows
you to take some time off and jump right back in at the place you left off (albeit with a
different class). Some teachers here are excellent and have reached a certain level of celebrity
(one of my friends took an HSK class even though she had no intention of taking the HSK because
she really liked the teacher); one teacher was so famous that they started their own Chinese HSK
prep school.

Class offerings range from beginner to advanced. Intermediate classes study BLCU's "Bridge"
(乔良) which would be the equivalent of D-level classes at BLCU. Advanced classes offer movie
listening, Newspaper/Journal reading, writing, Spoken Chinese and HSK prep. Classes are also
offered in Japanese and Korean.

Juncheng (courtesy of Roddy)

I'd seen their adverts in Thats Beijing, and had to go there to register for the HSK recently
(after all the other places closed registration). They're a 3 minute walk from Beijing Railway
Station, which means they're very central. Based in what looks like a private middle school.
According to the receptionist they have about 100 foreign students from all over the world, and
although I didn't get a guided tour the facilities I saw looked pretty good - clean, modern,
friendly staff, and they had a pretty good stock of books. President of the school is a member of
the International Society for Chinese Language Teaching ( 世界汉语教学学会)

They have the usual price list - a year is 2400US$, half a year 1200US$, 3 months 800US$ and one
month is 250US$. They also offer one to one classes, HSK prep, etc. They have student dormitories
and homestay options.

Private School Vs. University/College

University:
Pros: 1)Solid and experienced teaching (most of the time)
2)A more structured environemnt (with tests)
3)Official Certificates, diplomas after completing a course
4)Chance to learn about new cultures from classmates.
Cons: 1)Expensive (compared to private schools)
2)minimal contact with local Chinese

Private School:
Pros: 1)Cheap - some schools are as low as 12yuan/hr
2)Flexible - you can come any time of year and enroll instantly. you can pick and choose classes.

Cons: 1) teaching quality (some say it's inferior)
2) environment is isolated.
3)minimal contact with local Chinese

Directly Applying vs. WorldLink, Educasian, etc.

People always are worrying about whether or not to apply directly to their university of choice or
to use a service like WorldLink or Educasian. Both are fine options, but one is substantially more
expensive than the other. Many people worry about not being able to speak Chinese well, getting
lost initially, etc. I'm providing links to other threads about this. (links provided by Roddy)

http://www. From Beijing Chinese School.com/showth...ight=worldlink
http://www. From Beijing Chinese School.com/showth...ight=worldlink

Educasion Links
http://www. From Beijing Chinese School.com/showth...ight=educasian

艾琳2005 -

Hi - I've got a little bit to add on two smaller Beijing uni's if you want to add this ...

I don't know about the costs of either of these unis as I studied at both on scholarships, but I
gather they are fairly inexpensive.

Beijing Huagong Daxue (Beijing University of Chemical Technology)
I spent 6 months at Huagong Daxue in 2003. The uni is in a great location on the north 3rd ring
road (near the economics and foreign trade uni and the sino-japanese hospital) pretty much midway
between the old city, chaoyang clubs/embassies/cbd and and wudaokou (other unis). The campus is
quite small but nice – dorms were modern and large and they have a great library for studying
in. During my time there I was the only native English speaker (there were a few other Europeans
who I tended to speak English with) in between 100 and 30 foreign students (lots of ppl went home
when SARS broke out). The Chinese students at Huagong were a pretty cool mix and as a lot of them
are studying engineering and science they were almost never pushy about speaking English. With so
few foreign students it was a pretty friendly group (foreign students for various countries seemed
to mix a lot more than at a bigger uni) and also the class sizes were pretty small – really good
for individual attention. The only downside was that (my experience of ) the teaching quality for
intermediate/ advanced students was a little variable and they didn’t really seem to have the
resources/expertise in teaching Chinese that the big language universities have – most of the
other foreign students were in first year/ lower 2nd year.

Beijing Erwai (Beijing 2nd foreign languages university)
I studied at Erwai in 2001. It’s way out east in the boondocks (although there is light rail out
there now) in the middle of nowhere – there was a large supermarket and Maidanglao at the gate
though. There were about 600 foreign students studying there when I was there (probably are more
now) and maybe 5-6000 Chinese students – most of whom were studying English. The teaching/
resources at Erwai were generally quite good – and catered to all levels. The facilities at the
uni were not so good – lack of places to study other than in my tiny room – but they may have
been upgraded since then. The biggest downside to Erwai was the atmosphere and pressure to speak
English. I felt there was excess segregation between Chinese and foreigners. People were so
desperate to speak English and could even occasionally be seen hanging around the entrance to the
foreign student dorms for the chance to do just that – the school was also very (overly) strict
about Chinese people coming into the dorms – from memory even if you signed your friends in and
they had id etc they weren’t allowed to bring any bags in.

artichoke -

I'm currently going to both SL (www.slbeijing.com) and 地球村

SL classes are 90mins e.g. 8am-9.30am with 5 min break. I pay 24元 per class and 72元 for a
tutor from SL. The tutor is so far really good. A young Chinese guy with a background in teaching
English and Japanese as well as being a fudao to foreigners. I find him friendly, and good at
explaining new words and grammatical points - only using Chinese (at my request for no English!)

The SL class is not so good. Only been 2 students (me and another) so far, but the teacher is
lacklustre and cannot explain anything well. Perhaps others have had better teachers? But it's
sort of like having a fudao with only two students, lots of opportunity to 'du' and ask questions.
(Not that I've found the answers helpful, but maybe it's my Chinese tingli that's no good??!!).
Again all conducted in Chinese (no English).

The 地球村 classes are also 24元 per class (not the cheaper price as stated above). Perhaps
this is because I have only enrolled for 7 lessons - a short visit to Beijing. the teacher I have
is excellent - very animated and expressive and can easily explain new words well. We do one
chapter each lesson (quite quick). We do new words, take turns in reading a line from the text
(about 10 students in the class) then the teacher goes through the text and explains the meaning
of the text and any grammatical points. Although the grammar is very very light-on. But I like the
pace and flow of the class.

Compared with BLCU, I'd say the fudao at SL and 地球村 teacher are on par with my experience
with the good teacher I had (so better than the two not so good teachers). The dodgy teacher at SL
is much worse than the BLCU zonghe teacher I had. So I'd say teaching quality really does depend
on the teacher's skills and not the school (type).

My flatmate, currently at BLCU in D ban, says that for advanced levels the BLCU style is not very
good, and she will be trying a few of the private schools out when this term finishes next week.

Hope this is useful, and in the right spot!

dncdoor -

My little testimony

Beida (Peking University), Spring 2008-02-19

I should start my mentioning that my benchmark for judging studying Chinese is the two semesters
that I spent at Shanghai Jiaotong University during 2007. If anyone would like any information as
regards my time spent there please contact me.

8 days ago, that’s when I arrived in Beijing to commence my half a year in China’s capital. My
aim for this semester is to correct someone of those Southern China habits which I have attained
whilst at the same time adding a few r’s to every sentence.

The application process began at the beginning of November, 07 at which time Beida required all
those interested to post their applications with the skill & luck that the International Office
would receive all necessary documentation on one specified day. One day late would mean no joy!! I
estimate that around 90% of the students enrolled on varying mandarin courses at Peking are party
to exchange programmes (most notably hailing from USA). CIEE also have their foot in the door to
provide those students with no gumption or know how with help in the application process.

On Thursday of last week, those wanting to enrol on the short term language course had to register
with Ms Huang & co at the Shao Yuan building on campus. This included paying the semesters
tuition. The information pack provided by the University is very useful, further complimented with
free tickets to see Beijing Opera, Acrobatics and a trip to Tiananmen amongst other activities. On
Day two we had to take a placement test which consisted of 4 parts; Listening (which also
represented your Spoken level), Reading, Grammar and a freehand section. The grammar was a little
taxing for me as although I could recognise all characters, I felt that I was inept at being able
to distinguish those words which are clearly synonyms. Day three we were placed into the relevant
Hanyu and Kouyu class and collected are teaching materials. Day 4: Timetable.

Classes started yesterday: Hanyu class (Gao 1). My teacher is really well prepared and at age 26
is full of the necessary energy required to stimulate ones mind at 8am (yes Beida’s morning
classes are at 8AM!). I met my Kouyu teacher today who is also very well prepared and is keen to
make sure that students talk as much as possible in class. NB: All teaching materials are Peking
University press such as the Boya Grammar textbooks.

On Thursday I will be attending the lecture during the afternoon which will direct us foreign
friends as to what Optional courses are up for grabs and when such classes will transpire.

General feeling:

*Beida’s campus is fantastic;
*Food really cheap and tasty;
*Service provided professional and friendly;
*Opportunity to speak is plentiful;
*Lots of USA expats;
*Bad points include: Extra fee for library card and usage of public computers;
*Extra fee for Lunch card;
*Lack of halls on site for lao wai;
*Classes (as ever) could have fewer students. We have 15 registered students in our Kouyu class;
*Lack of Korean and Japanese students which means that English is always lingering in the
background.

Classes are 50 minutes each time and usually two consecutively with a 10 minute break.

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Chinese Lesson - Adsotrans updated? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > Adsotrans.com Forum

Adsotrans updated?
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msittig -

Hey hey, thanks for bringing Adsotrans back online.

Were there any significant upgrades made? Or just general maintenance?

Pleco Software Learn Chinese with our Dictionaries for Palm and Pocket PC.
Learn Chinese in China Learn to speak Chinese 1MonthChinese.com -Mandarin School in China.
Chinese Textbooks Wide range, cheap, varied languages. Also Chinese cartoons, toys, gifts.
Study Chinese in Beijing Affordable Mandarin language courses at BLCU with ChinaUnipath.com.
HNHSoft Dictionary Learn Chinese on Smartphone and PDA with real person's voice.
XueXueXue IQChinese Get beyond the plateau.Take your Mandarin to a new level.
Chinese in Lijiang Short term Chinese study in a beautiful town with a focus on daily life.
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About Ads (and how to hide them) -- Your message here

trevelyan -

Revised version of the database along with bug-fixes to the new software package -- finally pushes
us over the 185,000 mark (well over... we're around 185,500 entries now). Was planning on
polishing some of the code before making a more general announcement, but the latest version is
all there in the downloads directory for anyone who wants/needs it.

Cheers,

--dave

p.s. the server is about 3.5 years old right about now and is starting to struggle - that's why
it's been offline so often lately. I need to step up getting another server (maybe virtual)
somewhere else although I won't be able to get around to this until mid-January. In the meantime,
if it's done, anyone can ping me and I'll call for a reboot.

msittig -

Sweet, thanks a bunch.

James Garrison -

Oh, is Adsotrans back online? I cannot access it!

geek_frappa -

it's up again.

trevelyan -

server is just being predictably unstable. will be getting a new one in mid-January. might be up
and down until then, but it's up now at least.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - Chinese Sex and the City... Any good? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Films and Television > Chinese TV Shows - The First Episode

Project
Chinese Sex and the City... Any good?
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doumeizhen -

There's a tv show available in DVD shops that is like the Chinese Sex and the City.I forgot the
name. Has anyone seen it, and do you think its a worthwhile investment?

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Chinese Textbooks Wide range, cheap, varied languages. Also Chinese cartoons, toys, gifts.
Study Chinese in Beijing Affordable Mandarin language courses at BLCU with ChinaUnipath.com.
HNHSoft Dictionary Learn Chinese on Smartphone and PDA with real person's voice.
XueXueXue IQChinese Get beyond the plateau.Take your Mandarin to a new level.
Chinese in Lijiang Short term Chinese study in a beautiful town with a focus on daily life.
MandarinTube Chinese Access to current everyday Chinese language and culture, 24/7.
Learn Chinese Homestay Chinese course, cultural activities & volunteer events in China.
Learn Chinese Online 1-on-1 instant tutoring, diverse courses, native teachers. FREE trial now!
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heifeng -

I think I have that one. is it called 好想好想谈恋爱?

I started watching it a few times, but for some reason never really felt the urge to finish
watching it. Then again, I only like cop dramas and really sappy tv series...I would be willing to
give it to you in exchange for another one.

flameproof -

it's called "Pink Lady" or 粉红女郎 . It's from 2003. You can find it online, but I find the
resolution a little low, so I will search for the DVD next time in a shop in China....

Interesting, 好想好想谈恋爱 looks very similar too, 4 girls....... looks like yet another
SATC clone, but seems newer....

Any feedback on those two?

doumeizhen -

好想好想谈恋爱! That's it!

Heifeng, you've left me in a pinch... I love sap, but not cop-dramas. However, I did love
粉红女郎! Flameproof, you have good taste! I've seen the whole thing twice, at least... I also
liked 双向跑。But how could you not like anything with 刘若英in it... Have you seen
别了温哥华?That's pretty pretty sappy (and very addicitive, I think it accounted for at
least two sick days when we were watching it. Let me know if you are interested...

heifeng -

别了温哥华 sounds promising

renzhe -

Probably too late for the thread starter, but anyway.

好想好想谈恋爱 is OK, but a bit too girly for my taste. The production and acting are
really good. It's not a cheap soap opera.

The plot is basically four young women around 30 looking for men and their adventures. The
characters were copied almost verbatim from Sex and the City, but they're interesting enough. If
you are interested in such a plot and can swallow a story about four women in Beijing acting and
living like they're in Manhattan, it should be good for you.

From a Chinese level, I found it quite difficult. Very fast, lots of Beijing slang and plenty of
words you can't find in CEDICT. I wouldn't recommend it for beginners. It should be fine for
intermediate-advanced learners.

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Learn to speak Chinese - Guide to Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Wikis > Guide to Chinese

Guide to Chinese
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  #1 

Guide to Chinese

New articles can be created via the "Wikis" dropdown in the header.

See Guide for Formatting Wiki Articles in  From Beijing Chinese School
* Guide to Chinese

I

* Input Methods for Typing Characters and Pinyin

M

* Magazine and Newspapers

N

* New Approaches to Learning Chinese
* New Practical Chinese Reader

R

* Radicals

T

* Tones

U

* Useful Wordlists - Endearment, 好, 可, Onomatopoeias

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Accessing Cash

Thread: Accessing Cash
View Single Post

  #1 

Accessing Cash

[top]ATM

For simplicity's sake, and assuming you aren't going to be earning any money locally, the best
thing to do is probably use your bank card from home - obviously check you'll be able to, but
there can't be many cards that can't be used abroad nowadays. It might be worth opening a new
account at home with a bank that offers good rates on overseas transactions.

Many banks charge an international transaction fee, in addition to an ATM withdrawal charge. These
charges can be substantial.

However, if you shop around, you may find banks that don't charge such fee. Nationwide in UK is
one. Bank of America (US) has a relationship with China Construction Bank, and there is no fee for
withdrawing from Construction Bank ATMs with Bank of American ATM cards.

If you are from Germany, your EC card will work in China and you can withdraw cash. The fees are
quite low too

[top]Wire Transfer

Wire transfer, also known as T/T, is the fastest way to receive a large amount of money. You need
the destination bank's number, also know as the swift code and your account no. Banks usually
charge from USD20-USD40 one time for outgoing transfer. There is no limit as far as I know to how
much you can transfer. Large corporations transfer millions all the time through wire. Incoming
transfers have no charges.

Transferring out of China, however, is more complicated (to be discussed).

For wire, Bank of China is the quickest. Some of the other banks wire through Bank of China and
will take much longer. Bank of China transfer usually get through the next day.

One thing to note: make sure your name matches that in your passport! If you have a middle name on
your passport, but no middle name on your wire transfer, the transaction may not go through.

Exchange rates through the Bank of China is close to the market rate. If you try to withdraw your
cash in your native currency before exchanging to RMB, they will charge you 1%. If you convert
first to RMB, then there is no charge.

[top]Opening a Bank Account

If you are in China for China for a long-term stay, it may be more convenient to open up a local
bank account. The biggest banks in China are Bank of China (中国银行), Industrial and
Commercial Bank (ICBC - 工商银行), Agricultural Bank (农业银行), Construction Bank (CCB -
建设银行), Bank of Communications 交通银行, and China Merchants Bank (CMB - 招商银行).

Although probably all of the above banks can receive foreign wire transfers and exchange your
foreign currency, Bank of China (BoC) has special authority in deal in foreign currency. In
particular, for depositing a check from a foreign bank account, BoC charges a much lower
processing fee (about RMB10) than the other local banks and the processing time is much shorter
(5-6 weeks vs. 8 or more weeks), though still too long.

Bank of China accounts were always limited to the province/region where you opened them.

All you need to open a bank account is your passport, an address and a phone number. It could even
be a friend's address. They don't check and won't be mailing you anything. Though it might be
intimidating if you don't know Chinese, BofC has staff that speaks English and has many
non-Chinese-speaking customers..

For a long-term stay, it may be preferable to open a local bank account and use the debit card
they issue. To transfer money from foreign accounts, you can either wire them over or deposit a
personal check paid to yourself. Wire probably can happen within a day. Depositing a personal
check takes much longer, about a 1-month turnaround, but the fee is much less for a personal
check, less than US$10 paid to BofC vs. US$30 you would have to pay the banks on the two ends for
the wire. Once the foreign currency is in your BofC, you can convert it into RMB as needed.

Many banks have nowadays online banking. ICBC has an English interface, which makes handling
easier. CMB has Chinese only. HSBC has also an English interface, but it is not really a "local"
bank. Their deposit minimum now is RMB 100,000 - or you pay RMB 150/month account fees.

For sending money within China check the transfer fees. They are different from inner city and out
of city. They can be as high as 1%, usually capt at RMB50

====================================================================================================

Contributors: flameproof, gato
Created by gato, 10th October 2007 at 01:08 PM
Last edited by flameproof, 22nd October 2007 at 04:24 PM
21 Comments , 2965 Views

Discussion

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 13th March 2008, 11:48 AM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By imron

回复: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

ok, well, there are now a bunch of freshly approved posts.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 13th March 2008, 11:26 AM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By imron

回复: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Let me know when you've marked the forums as read, and I'll go and moderate some posts.

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 13th March 2008, 11:48 AM

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How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By imron

回复: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

ok, well, there are now a bunch of freshly approved posts.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 13th March 2008, 11:26 AM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By imron

回复: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Let me know when you've marked the forums as read, and I'll go and moderate some posts.

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 6th May 2008, 03:11 PM

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'a language of xxx' generalizations

Views: 266

Posted By simonlaing

Re: 'a language of xxx' generalizations

Shanghainese: a language of haggling
Beijinghua : a language of pirates, (or politics) Arrr
sichuanese : a language of spice

hehe,
have fun,
SimoN:)

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Forum: Other cultures and language 16th August 2006, 02:56 AM

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What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By LoudSilence

Time for a post revival. I can speak English,...

Time for a post revival.

I can speak English, Arabic, Urdu (basic), Chinese (learning), and I knew some Spanish once upon a
time. I'm aiming to learn Korean, Japanese, Malaysian, and Indonesian,...

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