"Mudanjiang" is a song sung by Nanquan Mama, with lyrics written by Fang Wenshan and music composed by Yang Ruidai. It is included in the music album "Meal No. 2" released by Nanquan Mama on August 12, 2005. "Mudanjiang" is the fifth song in the album.
1. There are a lot of "erhua" sounds in the songs, especially starting from Mudanjiang Wan'er, which is especially obvious. However, in southern my country and Taiwan, the sound of "erhua" is not spoken.
2. Make soup (make soup for grandma and drink a bowl of soup from home). Making soup is also called soup in the north, but it is mostly called soup in the south.
3. Don’t, beng (we don’t care about small fish getting on the boat)
Example: Water thieves crossing the river - don’t let dogs plow them
The common characters of the northern dialect spread from Beijing, Tongzhou, Cangzhou and Zhili counties to most parts of the north in a circular shape.
4. Rare: Northern dialect Rare: Like. The pronunciation is similar to "Xiehen (hen light pronunciation)", for example: This kid is really rare (Xiehen). It means this kid is really lovable.
5. Grandma, grandmother in northern dialect, usually refers to mother's mother. Different places and dialects have different names for grandparents and maternal grandparents. For example, in northern China, grandparents are called grandpa and grandma, and maternal grandparents are called grandpa and grandma. In Cantonese, grandparents are called grandpa, grandma or grandpa, grandma, and maternal grandparents are called father-in-law and mother-in-law. In Hokkien, both grandparents and maternal grandparents are called grandpa and grandma (or grandpa and grandma more specifically). In Wu dialect (especially Suzhou dialect), grandparents are called "good father-in-law" and "good mother-in-law". It can be seen that the word "grandma" also refers to northern China, not the south or Taiwan.
6. Grandpa’s name is roughly the same as the explanation above.
7. What: Lyrics (what does it look like now) (This should be the lyricist intentionally emphasizing the geographical location, using "what looks like" instead of "what kind of")
What: Dialect, What: This is the place? What's your last name? That is.
Distributed in many places in northern China.
In parts of the south (pronounced sa, the actual pronunciation is obviously different from "sha").
The dialect of Xianyang area in Shaanxi Province and Zhengning County in Gansu Province. What does it mean? It is pronounced she (Tong: She’s pronunciation, ancient Chinese pronunciation).
Henan dialect has four tones.