How To Write An Email In Traditional Chinese (Beginner-Friendly With Pinyin)
Email in Traditional Chinese follows a clean rhythm: clear subject → polite greeting → purpose in the first paragraph → […]
All Yak Yacker Traditional Chinese posts (繁體中文 fántǐ zhōngwén)—practical phrases, characters, grammar patterns, and Taiwan-style Mandarin learning tips.
Email in Traditional Chinese follows a clean rhythm: clear subject → polite greeting → purpose in the first paragraph → […]
Dates are tiny time-capsules, and Mandarin labels them with a clean, left-to-right rhythm: year → month → day. Learn the
“Hard” depends on what your brain grew up practicing. Mandarin trains you to love tones, characters, and grammar without conjugations.
“Easy” in languages is like “easy” in desserts—depends on your taste, your tools, and whether you grew up around a
Prepositions in Mandarin are often coverbs—little verbs that slide in front of a noun to mark relationships like “at,” “to,”
Conversations flow on small bridges: and, but, because, so, if. In Mandarin, these connectors are compact and powerful. Master a
Slang is the spice rack of everyday Mandarin—especially in Taiwan. Learn a handful of high-frequency 俚語 you’ll actually hear on
Traditional Chinese (Taiwan) • Survival Phrase Nature’s Call: How To Ask “Where Is The Toilet?” In Traditional Chinese Learn the
Food is where vocabulary shakes hands with real life. In Traditional Chinese, cuisine terms are built from intuitive roots—飯 for
Whether you’re in a night market grabbing a quick can of 台啤 (Táipí – Taiwan Beer) or sitting down at