I wonder if they know Taiwanese and Hong Konger K-pop idols. If both do then they need to use Traditional Chinese Taiwan text just like how Twice Tzuyu's fellow Taiwanese people work in Hong Kong for NCT Lucas and GOT7 Jackson's flag carrier Cathay Pacific.
Shuhua is literally in gidle and is from Taiwan so I’m sure they know Taiwanese people. And Yuqi was friends with Lucas and Jackson. And no, just because they know Taiwanese / HKers doesn’t mean they have to use traditional text. Wtf is that kind of logic. The vast majority of Chinese people use simplified. Why not tell the Taiwanese and HKers to use simplified, why cater to a tiny populace when the simplified version is far more widespread.
@@scholarssolutions6735 Ok then but for the Hong Kongers and Taiwanese they are opposed to the Simplified Chinese text because those places know that using Simplfied Chinese meant they follow the Mainland China text. As a matter of fact Traditional chinese is used in Chinatowns around the world. To them using simplified chinese meant erasing the Traditional chinese text
@@EpicThe112Nobody is forcing Taiwanese or HKers to not use traditional text, you’re the only one here saying mainland Chinese should have to bend to a tiny population’s will for using traditional text. And using one text is not erasing the other lmao. Latin is a dead language but it hasn’t been erased. Coptic is all but not used and it hasn’t been erased. Your logic is flawed. But what I’m saying is there’s no reason to force the vast majority of Chinese people to have to accommodate to the Taiwanese / HKers either when they make up such a tiny proportion of ethnic Chinese. They’re not special snowflakes. They can use traditional characters if they want, other Chinese people can use simplified if they want. But if we must go by one usage, why force the majority of the population to use traditional. Don’t you think it should be by majority rule if one had to be used? I mean by your logic, the Koreans should go back to using hanja and the Vietnamese should go back to using chu nom because “it’s being wiped out” since historically Koreans and Vietnamese used those much more complicated scripts. Languages and cultures change, it’s a fact of life. Should all English speakers use Shakespearean spelling and words too? This hand wringing over “traditional” Chinese and pandering to a tiny population of Taiwanese and HKers is stupid.
If you ever saw Ning in person. I’d be so lucky to see such a sight
and both my biases 💖😘
Fact:- They both are my bias ❤
THE BESTIES 🎀🇨🇳
Meanwhile both are my bias ❤
which episode is this
Where is this from?
Namoradinhas que namoram (meu sonho)
Ning ning like jennie
Fr it's kinda look like jennie
13:40 NAHHHH LAST TIME IT WAS UNFORGIVEN NOW THIS?!?!
Wrong video???
@@koriakakotaka4055 wait how did my comment get here- I commented this on a le sserafim tiktok compilation 💀💀
I wonder if they know Taiwanese and Hong Konger K-pop idols. If both do then they need to use Traditional Chinese Taiwan text just like how Twice Tzuyu's fellow Taiwanese people work in Hong Kong for NCT Lucas and GOT7 Jackson's flag carrier Cathay Pacific.
Shuhua is literally in gidle and is from Taiwan so I’m sure they know Taiwanese people. And Yuqi was friends with Lucas and Jackson.
And no, just because they know Taiwanese / HKers doesn’t mean they have to use traditional text. Wtf is that kind of logic. The vast majority of Chinese people use simplified. Why not tell the Taiwanese and HKers to use simplified, why cater to a tiny populace when the simplified version is far more widespread.
@@scholarssolutions6735 Ok then but for the Hong Kongers and Taiwanese they are opposed to the Simplified Chinese text because those places know that using Simplfied Chinese meant they follow the Mainland China text. As a matter of fact Traditional chinese is used in Chinatowns around the world. To them using simplified chinese meant erasing the Traditional chinese text
Bart from jknews has metaphorically entered the chat.
@@EpicThe112Nobody is forcing Taiwanese or HKers to not use traditional text, you’re the only one here saying mainland Chinese should have to bend to a tiny population’s will for using traditional text. And using one text is not erasing the other lmao. Latin is a dead language but it hasn’t been erased. Coptic is all but not used and it hasn’t been erased. Your logic is flawed.
But what I’m saying is there’s no reason to force the vast majority of Chinese people to have to accommodate to the Taiwanese / HKers either when they make up such a tiny proportion of ethnic Chinese. They’re not special snowflakes. They can use traditional characters if they want, other Chinese people can use simplified if they want.
But if we must go by one usage, why force the majority of the population to use traditional. Don’t you think it should be by majority rule if one had to be used?
I mean by your logic, the Koreans should go back to using hanja and the Vietnamese should go back to using chu nom because “it’s being wiped out” since historically Koreans and Vietnamese used those much more complicated scripts. Languages and cultures change, it’s a fact of life. Should all English speakers use Shakespearean spelling and words too? This hand wringing over “traditional” Chinese and pandering to a tiny population of Taiwanese and HKers is stupid.
bruh...