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What do you mean by bye-bye in Tianjin?

When Tianjin people say goodbye, it means uncle.

Tianjin people call "uncle" in the same way, and "uncle" is called "big". "Auntie" is called "Empress". It should be noted that the age ranking of relatives in Tianjin is contrary to that in many places, and the youngest is called "Lao". For example, classmates always say what her sister is like, and when she comes to Tianjin, she is called "old aunt".

Commonly used dialects in Tianjin:

Free time: free time, free time.

Cold (softly): it means repair and debugging. For example, the next time your bike breaks down, you can say to the mechanic, "Master is in a daze." Bell tunnel!

Erwuyan: A muddled person.

Fankou: the time for eating, for example, I'm really bored, so I'll come back to grab Fankou.

Fenqiu (Qiu softly): Generally speaking, it refers to moving hands and feet, such as sitting still! Don't be crazy about autumn here.

Auricularia auricula: funny, interesting and humorous.

language feature

(1) Some initials zh, ch and sh in Mandarin are curly words, which are pronounced as Z, C and S with flat initials in Tianjin dialect, such as Zhan in Zhan, but zan uses Tianjin dialect; "Zhao" in "Recruiting Soldiers" is pronounced as jujube; Use Tianjin dialect; "Zen", but Tianjin dialect is pronounced as monk Zen; ; "Shang che"

Read Sance in Tianjin dialect; ; The word "Shi" of "Yin" is pronounced as "Si" in Tianjin dialect; The "mountain" of "mountain range" is pronounced as mountain in Tianjin dialect and so on. This is what people usually say-Tianjin dialect has many "teeth sounds".

(2) Mandarin has an initial r, which is generally pronounced as zero in Tianjin dialect. The consonant r is replaced by vowel ο, such as "Ren", "Hot", "Rou" and "Run", but Tianjin dialect is pronounced as in, ie, you and yun respectively. Another example is "Yong, Yong, Yong", which is pronounced as Yong and Rong in Mandarin; In Tianjin dialect. The words "let, let, let, let" are pronounced in Mandarin, but Yang is pronounced in Tianjin dialect.

(3) In addition, Tianjin dialect is used to add the initial n before the opening syllable of A O E, such as reading "An" as nan, "Guo" as ne, "Boiling" as nao, "Guai" as nai, "Ou" as seagull and so on.

(4) Word-eating phenomenon (common in middle-aged and elderly people): In Tianjin dialect, three words are often read together with the first two words, resulting in word-eating phenomenon. For example, "police station" is "school" and "persuasion field" is "persuasion field".

Fruit grate: an early kind of fried puffed pancake, often sold with fried dough sticks. It's called "Crispy" in Beijing, also called fruitcake.

Clap your hands: it can be used as a modal particle, such as screaming; It can also be used as onomatopoeia; You can also clap as a verb.