Hi I wanted to see if anyone could help me with these translations/hanzis for these following words:
* mien kerng - (I believe this means reluctant/unwilling? or was that average/ok?)
* Mó kwái ('kwái' has a short "a" sound and is rising) - (I heard this in a song, i think it's a noun for something... any thoughts?)
I also wanted to ask about the grammar of the word "gwai" - ghost. I know many Cantonese people use "gwai" as an intensified. such as "lei gong mut gwai" - What are you saying? I recently heart "zao gwai jo" - to leave/run away. Is the "gwai" an intensifier? I also heard a replacement for the word "gwai" with the word "cheun" (spring). "lei gong mut cheun?" So are "gwai" and "cheun" intensifiers?
a few translations/hanzis
Re: a few translations/hanzis
>> Is the "gwai" an intensifier?
yes.
>> I also heard a replacement for the word "gwai" with the word "cheun" (spring). "lei gong mut cheun?" So are "gwai" and "cheun" intensifiers?
well... here "cheun" means "testis".
"gong mut cheun" = " ballocks" [COARSE slang] nonsense.
yes.
>> I also heard a replacement for the word "gwai" with the word "cheun" (spring). "lei gong mut cheun?" So are "gwai" and "cheun" intensifiers?
well... here "cheun" means "testis".
"gong mut cheun" = " ballocks" [COARSE slang] nonsense.
Re: a few translations/hanzis
Hoho! BTW, that should be "bollocks", which was once part of a song by a certain punk band. They were taken to court over it, but the attorney argued it was something to do with the church (either vestments or some such), therefore its a bone fide word, apparently.
Dyl.
Dyl.
Never Mind The...
Dear all,
Dylan wrote:
>They were taken to court over it, but the attorney
>argued it was something to do with the church (either
>vestments or some such), therefore its a bone fide
>word, apparently.
I found this entry for bollock at the Oxford English Dictionary web site:
[var. BALLOCK.]
1. pl. The testicles. Cf. BALLOCK 1.
1744 School of Venus in D. Thomas Long Time Burning (1969) 362 You..can now without blushing call pr*ck, stones, bollocks, c*nt, tarse and the like names. 1763 WILKES & POTTER Essay on Woman (1871) 19 Pr*ck, c*nt, and bollocks in convulsions hurl'd. 1874 Lett. fr. Friend in Paris II. 158 At the same time handling the noble bollocks. 1968 Landfall XXII. 17 Fine specimen of a lad, my Monty. All bollocks and beef.
2. Naut. Either of two blocks fastened to the topsail-yard, for the topsail-ties to reeve through.
1889 Cent. Dict., Bollock-block. 1898 ANSTED Dict. Sea Terms, Bollocks, blocks secured to the middle of the topsail yards in large ships; the topsail ties pass through them, and thereby gain an increase of power in lifting the yards.
3. pl. (See quot. 1919); also, a mess, a muddle; nonsense (also as int.). As adj., naked. low slang. Cf. BALLOCK 2.
1919 DOWNING Digger Dial. 12 Bollocks (n. or adj.), absurd; an absurdity. 1950 G. WILSON Brave Company (1951) viii. 142 He's stark bollock. Ibid. ix. 159 Christ, what a bollocks. 1969 It 11-24 Apr. 15/2 Bollocks, nobody at all wants to know. Ibid. 15/3 It's really a load of bollocks.
xxxxxx
It doesn't seem to have anything to do with church paraphanalia, though.
I tried to find an article about the court case but didn't have the time to wade through all the hits.
I did find a UK site where they censored the offending word by writing "b*ll*cks" instead of "bollocks".
Here in the States we wouldn't find the word offensive. In fact most people here have probably never heard the word save for the Pistols album.
Note: I also censored 2 words in the above definition entry with asterisks that might be considered obscene in the States.
Kobo-Daishi, PLLA.
Dylan wrote:
>They were taken to court over it, but the attorney
>argued it was something to do with the church (either
>vestments or some such), therefore its a bone fide
>word, apparently.
I found this entry for bollock at the Oxford English Dictionary web site:
[var. BALLOCK.]
1. pl. The testicles. Cf. BALLOCK 1.
1744 School of Venus in D. Thomas Long Time Burning (1969) 362 You..can now without blushing call pr*ck, stones, bollocks, c*nt, tarse and the like names. 1763 WILKES & POTTER Essay on Woman (1871) 19 Pr*ck, c*nt, and bollocks in convulsions hurl'd. 1874 Lett. fr. Friend in Paris II. 158 At the same time handling the noble bollocks. 1968 Landfall XXII. 17 Fine specimen of a lad, my Monty. All bollocks and beef.
2. Naut. Either of two blocks fastened to the topsail-yard, for the topsail-ties to reeve through.
1889 Cent. Dict., Bollock-block. 1898 ANSTED Dict. Sea Terms, Bollocks, blocks secured to the middle of the topsail yards in large ships; the topsail ties pass through them, and thereby gain an increase of power in lifting the yards.
3. pl. (See quot. 1919); also, a mess, a muddle; nonsense (also as int.). As adj., naked. low slang. Cf. BALLOCK 2.
1919 DOWNING Digger Dial. 12 Bollocks (n. or adj.), absurd; an absurdity. 1950 G. WILSON Brave Company (1951) viii. 142 He's stark bollock. Ibid. ix. 159 Christ, what a bollocks. 1969 It 11-24 Apr. 15/2 Bollocks, nobody at all wants to know. Ibid. 15/3 It's really a load of bollocks.
xxxxxx
It doesn't seem to have anything to do with church paraphanalia, though.
I tried to find an article about the court case but didn't have the time to wade through all the hits.
I did find a UK site where they censored the offending word by writing "b*ll*cks" instead of "bollocks".
Here in the States we wouldn't find the word offensive. In fact most people here have probably never heard the word save for the Pistols album.
Note: I also censored 2 words in the above definition entry with asterisks that might be considered obscene in the States.
Kobo-Daishi, PLLA.
Re: a few translations/hanzis
Dear all,
... wrote:
>well... here "cheun" means "testis".
What is the character for "cheun"?
Kobo-Daishi, PLLA.
... wrote:
>well... here "cheun" means "testis".
What is the character for "cheun"?
Kobo-Daishi, PLLA.
Re: a few translations/hanzis
no idea that how "ceon1" be written. it could be "春", but one thing that ppl ususally read "卵 leon2" as "ceon1".
Re: a few translations/hanzis
They were taken to court over it, but the attorney argued it was something to do with the church (either vestments or some such), therefore its a bone fide word