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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy read, useful content
This book is a joy to read and gives you a handful of useful chinese slang. It doesn't try to be comprehensive, but does a good job of explaining the terms it introduces.

If you're planning on spending any time in China and trying to speak Mandarin, this book is highly recommended. You'll be much better armed to deal with unfriendly locals -- both in recognizing...

Published on March 20, 2000 by Leo Dirac

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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Okay for the beginner, but disappointing
I agree with the reader from Wisconsin - "Outrageous Chinese" is a nice start, but ultimately, a little disappointing. It oscillates between being a book of slang, and an introduction to Chinese manners. The two chapters are particularly irrelevant - all that hokey about how foreigners should watch their tones, or how to introduce oneself - that's stuff you learn in...
Published on August 6, 2001


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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Okay for the beginner, but disappointing, August 6, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
I agree with the reader from Wisconsin - "Outrageous Chinese" is a nice start, but ultimately, a little disappointing. It oscillates between being a book of slang, and an introduction to Chinese manners. The two chapters are particularly irrelevant - all that hokey about how foreigners should watch their tones, or how to introduce oneself - that's stuff you learn in school/college/university. The book is subtitled "A Guide to Chinese Street Language", and so should be devoted entirely to just that. Similarly, the last chapter emphasising the correct pronunciation of chengyu (4 character Chinese phrases) - seems out of place.

This is a real shame, because I don't know of any other book in English which devotes itself entirely to the study of Chinese slang.

There's also quite a lot of anecdotes, which, if you've spent any time in China, reads like really, really old hat. We don't need to be told this!

Still, some of the chapters are pretty good - like the "love and sex", "judging people" and the "expletives undeleted" sections (the best bit of the book). Too bad there isn't a specific section on insults.

Other chapters just read like big vocabulary lists - "food and drink", "crime" and "falling ill" are just lame.

What might've been good - even though the book is called "Outrageous Chinese" - would be to include some more common phrases - not necessarily swear words, but just slangy ways of speaking - "shuang", for instance, which means "cool", "great", something you say after having done something which made you feel really good. Or "zhen shi de", which translates to something like "really!" or "you're too much!". To me, such phrases qualify as slang. (for a book along these lines, see "Popular Chinese Expressions", published by Sinolingua Publications in China - it's really good.)

The book's structure is a little too informal. Ideally, each new piece of slang ought to be followed by several examples for the keen language learner to understand the context in which it can be used. Some words are given extended coverage - like "cao", the equivalent of the F-word, but not all.

Many of the words in the book appear to be "Beijing slang" - and so some of the language introduced is only relevant if you're talking with someone from Beijing. Ideally, Mr Wang ought to indicate which words have currency throughout China, and which words are local only to Beijing people. This he only does sporadically, unfortunately.

Finally, one might note that "Outrageous Chinese" was published in 1994, and so some of the slang is out of date. For instance, he talks about `fen', but no-one uses that sort of money anymore. Similarly, there's nothing on the internet (this is covered in his book, "Mutant Mandarin", but even some of the terms there are outdated - the Chinese don't say "dianzi youjian", they say "email".)

Even though this review has been negative overall, Mr Wang is to be congratulated for producing such a book. It's unbelievably difficult to get the Chinese to teach one swear words. Often people will only teach you if you display some rudimentary knowledge already - so this book helps. I just hope he cuts some of the superfluous stuff out in the second edition.

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy read, useful content, March 20, 2000
By 
Leo Dirac (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
This book is a joy to read and gives you a handful of useful chinese slang. It doesn't try to be comprehensive, but does a good job of explaining the terms it introduces.

If you're planning on spending any time in China and trying to speak Mandarin, this book is highly recommended. You'll be much better armed to deal with unfriendly locals -- both in recognizing when they're being insulting and responding appropriately.

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly outrageous!, April 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
The title says it all--this is for all those students who wanted to learn a few cuss words in Chinese, but the teacher wouldn't do it! Some of the stories are hilarious, and very instructive as well. For example, Wang's story about the student who got the tone wrong on "pen" (bi in the third tone) and said "bi" in the first tone (slang for the female genitalia) when asking to borrow a female classmate's pen, is the kind of illustration that will definitely make a student pay attention to tones from then on! Lots of fun, with many good illustrations of Chinese life and culture that make learning easy.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mom and Dad never taught me words like these!, December 26, 1998
By 
R. Y. Wong (Michigan, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
Outrageous Chinese is a great title for this book. Growing up Chinese American, I never knew the equivalents to nasty four letter words in the English language. This book clears that up, points out funny faux pas', gives an anatomy lesson, and adds some curious Chinese cultural aspects. Get it as a handy reference!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Totally Awesome, October 28, 2004
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
The book begins with some embarrassing linguistic mishaps people experienced due to mis-using the tones - so watch your tones, lest you say something that will leave you blushing.

The first section of the book warns you of different word combinations that may end up sounding as if you had sexual connotations in mind. Separate section of the book deals with sexual jargon - when you desire to use it intentionally.

One of the sections deals with the delicacies on the menu that may appear strange to westerners.

Then you'll find proper forms of addressing others depending upon your relationship with them. Chinese customs have somewhat different rules than American.

Separate sections deal with crime, illness, weddings and funerals, expletives and idioms to watch for.

All in all, a great little book. Highly recommended.
You're bound to enjoy it from cover to cover.




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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good start, but ludicrous stories, March 16, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
This book is a good start at covering Chinese slang, but it only scratches the surface. Granted, it covers some of the more outrageous samples, and broaches some "forbidden" topics that you'll never get your Chinese teacher to talk about. Yet, at a slim 120+ pages, it is at best a rough guide. I'd like to see more in-depth coverage of a wide variety of slang. And as for the supposed stories about foreigners embarassing themselves with the language, I found them more akin to silly scenarious dreamed up by bored Chinese college students in their dorms. There's no way these scenarios would either happen or would elicit guffaws. Even if a big-nose were to make a mistake that bordered on being obscene, in my experience, Chinese people are quite polite and would merely correct the error, as would we in a similar situation.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Price on Amazon is Outrageous!!!, October 5, 2006
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
This is a great book with lots of fun and useful vocabulary words in it. These are all the words Chinese in the states lie to you about and say do not exist. It's also very handy for living in China as it provides a crash course in all profanites and gets you going along your way.

However, the price of this books should be 10-15 bucks, twenty at the most. The fact that they put it here for 100!!!! You've got to be kidding me. Better to sit down a Chinese in China and give them ten US for an hour long session with all the same information. Outrageous indeed.
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Naughty Boy!, April 14, 1999
By 
Joanna (Mt Shasta, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
Mr. Wang is a very naughty boy, but we are indebted to him for letting us "big noses" have a look at the Chinese we very rarely see.
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3 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars believable, July 11, 2001
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This review is from: Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language (Paperback)
I know these things can happen. When first in Germany, at a "Gasthaus" in Mainz, I ordered Chicken(in English). I was brought ham (schenken, in German). As a new student to German, I FINALLY realized I was arguing in English and she was arguing in German, when she said "Nicht Hahn (chicken).. es ist shenken (ham). So, as a beginning-to-intermediate student of Chinese, I really appreciate this book. It is a premier as to the danger of arrogance.
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Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language
Outrageous Chinese: A Guide to Chinese Street Language by James J. Wang (Paperback - May 1994)
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