Read Chinese For Dummies Online
Authors: Wendy Abraham
kÇlÄ'Åukè jÄ«
å¡æ欧å
æº
(
å¡ææå
æ©
)
(kah-lah-o-kuh jee) (
karaoke machine
)
MP3 bÅfà ngqì
MP3
ææ¾å¨
(MP3 baw-fahng-chee) (
MP3 player
)
ruÇnjià n
软件
(
è»ä»¶
)
(rwahn-jyan) (
software
)
sÇomiáoyÃ
æ«æ仪
(
ææå
) (saow-myaow-ee) (
scanner
)
shèxià ng jī
æåæº
(
æåæ©
)
(shuh-shyahng jee) (
camcorder
)
shÇutÃshì
ææå¼
(show-tee-shir) (
laptop
)
xiÇnshìqì
æ¾ç¤ºå¨
(
顯示å¨
)
(shyan-shir-chee) (
monitor
)
xiÇo pÃngbÇn dià nnÇo
å°å¹³æ¿çµè
(
å°å¹³æ¿é»è
¦
) (shyaow peeng-bahn dyan-naow) (
small tablet PC
)
yìngjià n
硬件
(eeng-jyan) (
computer hardware
)
zÇhé yÄ«nxiÇng
ç»åé³å
(
çµåé³å®
)
(dzoo-huh yeen-shyahng) (
stereo system
)
Getting a Good Price and Paying
Folks the world over want to get good deals on their purchases. At least they should. This section helps you discover the joys (and pitfalls) of haggling in Chinese.
Negotiating prices at the night market
One of the fun things to do in Taiwan and mainland China is to visit one of the lively night markets that abound. There, you can find anything from clothing and jewelry to antiques and food. Because the Chinese love to shop and
tÇojià huánjiÃ
讨价è¿ä»·
(
è¨å¹éå¹
) (taow-jyah hwahn-jyah) (
haggle
), you have plenty of company on your sojourns.
You should always assume that prices are negotiable in an open air market. You can always ask one of the following and see what happens:
Néng bùnéng piányì yìdiÇr?
è½ä¸è½ä¾¿å®ä¸ç¹å¿
? (
è½ä¸è½ä¾¿å®ä¸é»å
?) (nung boo-nung pyan-yee ee-dyar?) (
Can you sell it more cheaply?
)
Néng bùnéng shÇo yìdiÇr?
è½ä¸è½å°ä¸ç¹å¿
? (
è½ä¸è½å°ä¸é»å
?) (nung boo-nung shaow ee-dyar?) (
Can you lower the price?
)