Can Vietnamese speak Chinese?

Question 1: Can most Vietnamese understand Chinese? Can you speak Chinese? Can most Vietnamese understand Chinese?

The vast majority will not.

Can you speak Chinese?

The vast majority will not.

Others say that most of Vietnam's borders will?

1. There are more people who can speak Chinese on the northern border of China and Vietnam. In Mangjie, Liangshan and Laojie, the level of knowledge is also uneven.

2. There are many Chinese in Saigon in the south, some can speak vernacular and Chaozhou dialect, and a little less can speak Mandarin. Even fewer people know Chinese characters.

Where is the boundary?

The border with more Chinese should be the Sino-Vietnamese border, such as Mangjie, Liangshan and Laojie mentioned above. Vietnam also has the Vietnam-Cambodia border and the Vietnam-Cambodia border. It is estimated that there are quite a few people who can speak Lao and Cambodian.

Question 2: Do Vietnamese know Chinese and speak Mandarin? Is there a city in Vietnam called Ho Chi Minh City? There is a city in Vietnam called Ho Chi Minh City. Yes

Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnamese: Thành ph? h? Chí Minh//Chengpu Ho Chi Minh), formerly known as "Saigon" (Vietnamese: sà i gê n/Chaigan), is the largest city in Vietnam and one of the five municipalities directly under the Central Government. The present name of the city is to commemorate Ho Chi Minh, the founding leader of People's Republic of China (PRC), chairman of the Workers' Party of Vietnam and chairman of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.

The metropolitan area includes Ho Chi Minh City, Toulomu (Pingyang Province), Di 'an (Pingyang Province), Bianhe City (Tongnai Province) and surrounding towns, with a population of over 9 million. It is the largest metropolitan area in Viet Nam and the former French Indian zhina. In the metropolitan area of Ho Chi Minh City, the metropolitan area covers most areas. Qianjiang and Longan provinces in the southeast are planning a city of 30 square kilometers and a population of 200,000. According to the prediction of Mercer Human Resources Consulting, Economist Intelligence Unit and ECA International, by 2020, Ho Chi Minh City will become the most expensive city in the world.

Vietnamese who haven't studied Chinese certainly don't know Mandarin.

Question 3: Why do Vietnamese people speak Chinese with almost the same pronunciation as China people? Because after all, they speak a foreign language, not their own language, so it must be different.

Question 4: Can Vietnamese speak Chinese? At present, Vietnamese is mainly spoken, and some people speak Chinese.

Chinese characters have been used for a long time in Vietnamese history. /kloc-After the 0/0 century, China culture had a great influence, and Chinese characters were still officially advocated. Until the beginning of19th century, Chinese was widely used by feudal elites in Vietnam. Chinese characters are used in court documents and imperial examination papers, and couplets in temples are also written in Chinese characters.

/kloc-in the 0 th and 7 th centuries, western missionaries came to Vietnam to preach and recorded Vietnamese in Latin letters. /kloc-in the second half of the 9th century, the French colonial authorities imposed Vietnamese phonetic symbols, and 1882 stipulated that all official documents must be in Vietnamese. 19 17 Vietnam abolished the imperial examination system and replaced Chinese characters with Vietnamese pinyin characters. French colonial authorities regard Vietnamese characters as orthodox national language characters. 1945 After the birth of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Vietnamese became the unified official language of the country, widely used throughout the country, and constantly promoted, developed, enriched and improved.

Question 5: Can Vietnamese still speak without Chinese? Recently, I visited Dongxing, a small border town from Guangdong to Guangxi, separated from Vietnam by a river, and once again had close contact with that southern neighbor. If the six southern dialects of Chinese are not independent languages, then the language closest to Chinese is Bai; But if only foreign official languages are considered, Vietnamese is undoubtedly the closest to Chinese. Although the ancestors of Vietnamese are Baiyue family in Luoyue, and the bottom of the language is Mon-Khmer family, thousands of years of history as a native of China has already injected their language into a huge Chinese vocabulary. Without Chinese, Vietnamese can't express complex thoughts at all. I saw such a bilingual billboard on the bank of Beilun River in Dongxing. If you know a little about Vietnamese spelling rules, you can look at Vietnamese directly without paying attention to the Chinese above. Vietnamese is like this: c? Ng danTrung song? C Xu? t c? nhc? b? C Rahan VI ph? Mpháp p. But if all the Chinese and Vietnamese characters in it are changed into Chinese characters, that is: citizen China goes abroad to play chess, la? Reminds me of the pamphlet that our soldiers shouted to Vietnam when they fought back against Vietnam in self-defense. There is such a sentence in it: Các anhb? Bao vay r? After the replacement of Chinese characters, the I is: is every anh surrounded by R? I wrote this sentence in Cantonese, which should be: You are surrounded by dei. Zo means "you are surrounded" in Mandarin. There are many similarities between Vietnamese and Cantonese, such as thay in Vietnamese and "supporting Taiwan" in Cantonese. Nay in Vietnamese and Nennei in Cantonese both mean "this". If Ding Buling had not rebelled against the Southern Han regime in Guangzhou, or if the Jiaotoe regime had been eliminated in the Song Dynasty and was no longer the King of Jiaotoe County, then now Annan is just a region similar to Guangdong. However, history cannot assume that Ding Buling and Wu Quan occupied the Red River Delta, which is comparable to the Pearl River Delta, and became the only country among the five dynasties and eleven countries that was not unified by the Song Dynasty. Their descendants speak the most similar foreign language to Chinese in the world. ...

Question 6: Vietnamese are required to speak Chinese? Yes, but few people speak Yunnan dialect.

Question 7: Do Vietnamese know Chinese and speak Mandarin? Is there a city in Vietnam called Ho Chi Minh City? No Vietnamese can speak Chinese, but there are many overseas Chinese in Ho Chi Minh City. If you meet overseas Chinese, you can hear them speak Chinese.

Question 8: Do Vietnamese think Chinese sounds good? In fact, I have met many Vietnamese, but they think Chinese is not good. I don't like Vietnamese either. Maybe everyone thinks their country's language is the best ~

Question 9: Find a Vietnamese translator who can speak Chinese-Li will answer you.

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