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Moments that made you smile

 
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Outsida



Joined: 01 Aug 2006
Posts: 368
Location: Down here on the farm

PostPosted: Thu Aug 10, 2006 4:28 am    Post subject: Moments that made you smile Reply with quote

Today we were discussing movies. I pointed out that Chinese people like literal titles, then I gave them a few examples of Chinese translations of English titles that sound funny when translated back into English. For example, MI3 is idiomatic, meaning something like "So good spy" (literally, it means "CD in a CD"), and Nixon became "The big liar".

So I asked them to come up with some new names for Superman Returns. These are their titles:

Stalwart Man Returns
Fly Again
Superman with his new lover
Hero comes back
The Big man returns
The blue man rises again


In another class of middle school students, one student couldn't finish his sentence. So another jumped in:

S1: I could have gone to Hong Kong, but...
S2: ... but I have become a baboon.


What moments made you smile?
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ColinA



Joined: 31 May 2006
Posts: 262

PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 9:56 am    Post subject: Re: Moments that made you smile Reply with quote

Outsida wrote:
What moments made you smile?

1. Getting on a plane and seeing the family at the destination airport.
2. Seeing blue skies and breathing fresh air, at last.
3. Drinking water straight from the tap.
4. Driving my Camry again.
5. Going fishing and actually enjoying the fish.
6. Going surfing in crystal clear water.
7. eating a baked/roast chicken dinner
8. cooking on a 4 burner stove with an OVEN
9. teaching a high school curriculum that I didn't have to write
10 Being paid in dollars and not RMB/hr
11. enjoying pay TV instead of CCTV 9
12 Not having to put up with drifters, desperadoes and deviates
13 walking down the street without the usual "helloo, hahaha"
14 asking for something and not being told what I want to hear.
15 going camping and seeing a million stars
16 Not having to come up with excuses for being in China
17 Not having to kid myself that the cultural vices dont irk me.
18 riding on a bus without obnoxiously loud VCD/music, mobile calls or conversations
18 riding on a bus without being spat on by someone 2 seats up
19 crossing the road without having to look in 4 directions at once.
20 crossing the road without a constant sewage smell drifting up through the pavement.

Want another 200 reasons for smiling?
___________________________________________________
The last time anybody made a list of the top hundred character attributes of XXXzhou ren, common sense snuck in at number 79.
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therock



Joined: 31 Jul 2005
Posts: 1266
Location: China

PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 10:43 am    Post subject: Re: Moments that made you smile Reply with quote

Outsida wrote:
What moments made you smile?


Hey Colin, I'll add some to your list

1. Not being in mainland China.
2. Visiting Hong Kong.
3. Thinking about those suckers who are working for 4000RMB a month.
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Outsida



Joined: 01 Aug 2006
Posts: 368
Location: Down here on the farm

PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 1:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Colin, your attempt at slagging off China and the people there would be laughable if I didn't pity your desperate attempts at survival so much. Still, the ol' Work for the Dole program should be keeping you busy, right?

Don't pretend your life is all that. You wouldn't be here so much if it was.
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andrew_gz



Joined: 15 Feb 2005
Posts: 502
Location: Reborn in the PRC

PostPosted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 1:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

A moment that made me smile?

Recalling Colin's bashing by the locals. (Now it all makes sense)
Now that's justice. (paid in advance)


Last edited by andrew_gz on Tue Aug 15, 2006 4:26 am; edited 1 time in total
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ColinA



Joined: 31 May 2006
Posts: 262

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 2:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Colin, your attempt at slagging off China and the people there would be laughable if I didn't pity your desperate attempts at survival so much.

Slagging off at China? Never! Just which of my "smiles" is a fabrication of the experiences that faces a foreigner on a daily bases? You can please yourself but I see my observations as an objective assessment of what a ex-pat can realistically expect in a third world experience. You see, some people go to China on job transfers or short term (semester) teaching programs. Unlike those who choose to call it home, we don't have to kid ourselves into thinking conditions are other than they really are.

Others sadly, seek out (escape to) China for its pathetically low entrance standards (and remuneration) and have the hide to call themselves teachers. Using your language, they slag off at their country of original, their ex-wives, failed relationships, previous lifestyles, dead-end jobs and boredom. Their excuses are a desperate attempt to justify all the cultural "niceties" and environmental degradation that greets them at every turn.

Quote:
Still, the ol' Work for the Dole program should be keeping you busy, right?.

For the record I have enough Super' (thanks to a booming stock market) to never burden the taxpayer. But i still enjoy the challenge of a day here and there of supply teaching ($53.97/hr). Its a bit like going to China, if you're not reminded of things you value, you'll continue to take them for granted. The difference between you and I is I have grandchildren rather than a head full of testosterone.
______________________________________________________
Slow down, breathe some clean air and enjoy life. It's not only the scenery you miss - but the sense of where you are going and why.
Eddie Cantor
p.s The mugging was actually of a close friend after I left, but the story sounded better in the first person rather than the third, afterall what's in a name, especially an alias?
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adamsmith



Joined: 27 Jan 2006
Posts: 259
Location: wuhan

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 3:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

In response to ColinA - why I am smiling in China

1. Getting on a plane and seeing the family at the destination airport. - I am single - no family, so I am smiling and don't have to fly 14 hours.
2. Seeing blue skies and breathing fresh air, at last. - I see blue skies almost everyday and the air is fresh (I don't live in one of the big cities)
3. Drinking water straight from the tap. - I come from canada where the water is pure - and I still don't drink it right from the tap
4. Driving my Camry again. - I can drive here, I no how to pass tests and get a drivers licence
5. Going fishing and actually enjoying the fish. - I fish to relax ( i am not sure how you enjoy the fish but I hope you are not catching suckerfish Laughing Laughing ). I never keep them anyway.
6. Going surfing in crystal clear water. I am too old to surf and can't swim anyway. Unless you are talking about surfing the net.
7. eating a baked/roast chicken dinner - I had a very nice roast beef dinner the other night and I still have not left china.
8. cooking on a 4 burner stove with an OVEN - they are available in china - you just need to spend some of that fabulous super that you are always bragging on.
9. teaching a high school curriculum that I didn't have to write - What, I always thought that part of teaching was developing the best way to get your target objectives accross. Most prewritten curriculums wont match your own teaching strengths so you would have to revise/revamp them anyway.
10 Being paid in dollars and not RMB/hr - Oh, i get paid in Dollars here so I am really smiling because I am spending RMB
11. enjoying pay TV instead of CCTV 9 - I get my tv from dvds - actually get a much larger range than if I was at home.
12 Not having to put up with drifters, desperadoes and deviates - I don't put up with them here, and I met a lot more drifters, desperadoes and deviates back home than I have here.
13 walking down the street without the usual "helloo, hahaha" - Well, at least back home I have friends who will say hello to me, I am sorry you dont have anyone to lhavee a laugh with
14 asking for something and not being told what I want to hear. Gee, whenever I ask for something, all I hear is chinese - I don't understand it so just take what I need and walk away.
15 going camping and seeing a million stars - I never count the stars, but when I go camping I can see many of them right here in the old PRC,
16 Not having to come up with excuses for being in China - Dont have an excuse - I just like it
17 Not having to kid myself that the cultural vices dont irk me. But, hey They irk me, I don't kid myself.
18 riding on a bus without obnoxiously loud VCD/music, mobile calls or conversations, Well if I had a camry I would not take the bus in the first place.
18 riding on a bus without being spat on by someone 2 seats up, people did not like you did they - this never happened to me or anyone else I know. I see lots of spittle on the floor of the bus though.
19 crossing the road without having to look in 4 directions at once. - OK, I will give you this one. Just make sure you look both ways down there.
20 crossing the road without a constant sewage smell drifting up through the pavement. - Stay out of the areas of town that are so rundown that they are not part of the sewage system then. But who knows - maybe you are just walking there to look for that little something that makes you smile (see 12.)[b][/b]
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Outsida



Joined: 01 Aug 2006
Posts: 368
Location: Down here on the farm

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 4:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Slagging off at China? Never! Just which of my "smiles" is a fabrication of the experiences that faces a foreigner on a daily bases?


Your appalling spelling makes me wonder if you should be a teacher. Never mind, your aim is to make it seem as if foreigners will 100% for sure experience all of these privations and negatives all day, every day. Please!


Quote:
Others sadly, seek out (escape to) China for its pathetically low entrance standards (and remuneration) and have the hide to call themselves teachers. Using your language, they slag off at their country of original, their ex-wives, failed relationships, previous lifestyles, dead-end jobs and boredom. Their excuses are a desperate attempt to justify all the cultural "niceties" and environmental degradation that greets them at every turn.



Er... like you did?

Heh, that's the biggest irony... you hate us for what we're doing, but you did it yourself.


Quote:
For the record I have enough Super' (thanks to a booming stock market) to never burden the taxpayer. But i still enjoy the challenge of a day here and there of supply teaching ($53.97/hr). Its a bit like going to China, if you're not reminded of things you value, you'll continue to take them for granted. The difference between you and I is I have grandchildren rather than a head full of testosterone.


Ha ha, yes. You're really planning to spend your super on your grandkids. Very likely!

What was that you were saying about testosterone? When you felt "physically superior" to the locals? Or was it when you were describing your "impressive" physical dimensions to us?


Quote:
The mugging was actually of a close friend after I left, but the story sounded better in the first person rather than the third, afterall what's in a name, especially an alias?



Well, you've just done a better job of destroying whatever smidgen of credibility you had than I ever could have! Well done.

Any more made-up stories? Perhaps it's actually your friend who has the super account. Maybe you're actually a woman and Colin is a friend's name? What if it's the same friend in all of your stories? Shocked
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andrew_gz



Joined: 15 Feb 2005
Posts: 502
Location: Reborn in the PRC

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 6:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ColinA wrote, "The mugging was actually of a close friend after I left, but the story sounded better in the first person rather than the third, afterall what's in a name, especially an alias?"

I noticed elsewhere that a Mod chastised forumites for calling others a 'troll".
Given the above quote, just when is it OK to call someone a "troll"?
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7969



Joined: 26 Mar 2003
Posts: 5782
Location: Coastal Guangdong

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 7:41 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

hmmmm. being called a troll is one of the milder forms of insult on this board. if trolling were banned outright, there'd be 50% less posters on this forum on day one.
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andrew_gz



Joined: 15 Feb 2005
Posts: 502
Location: Reborn in the PRC

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 9:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

7969 wrote, "hmmmm. being called a troll is one of the milder forms of insult on this board"

Fair enough, what would you suggest?
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Tezcatlipoca



Joined: 17 Jul 2006
Posts: 1214

PostPosted: Tue Aug 15, 2006 9:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I got an email today that my fiancee's visa may be coming this fall (a full year earlier than expected). It's not a guarantee, but the thought of taking her 'home' and showing her all of the things about my life that she has been able to show me about hers, definitely brings a smile to my face.
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