|
||
攤 | ||
taan1
|
||
[1] [v] spread out; unfold; unroll [2] [v] share; contribute; split the cost [3] [n] vendor's stand; booth; stall [4] [classifier] pool; puddle (of water, mud, etc) Additional PoS: Show all nouns that can use this classifier Stroke count: 22
Level: 1
Radical: 扌 (#64)
This character is used in both Cantonese and Mandarin/Standard written Chinese. |
||
攤 / 摊 | ||
This word has been viewed 7362 times since 30th Oct 2012, was added by sheik on 18th Mar 2007 21:22 and last edited on 20th Apr 2012 02:33 |
||
|
||
Sponsors: One-on-One Online Chinese Tutoring | Mandarin | Learn Spanish Living in China | Learn Chinese in China | Learn Mandarin in China | Chinese School | Mandarin lessons in London |
||
殺攤 saat3 taan1 = to finish; to end; to terminate; to conclude; to close; termination; closure 粵 煞攤 saat3 taan1 = to finish; to end; to terminate; to conclude; to close; termination; closure 粵 番攤 faan1 taan1 = fan-tan, a Cantonese form of gambling 攤開 taan1 hoi1 = lay open 執二攤 zap1 ji6 taan1 = fill my shoes 攤檔 taan1 dong3 = a stall; a kiosk 粵 攤牌 taan1 paai4*2 = showdown; make deal 擺地攤 baai2 dei6 taan1 = sell articles displayed on sidewalk floor 書報攤 syu1 bou3 taan1 = newsagent 攤位 taan1 wai6*2 = a stall (at a market or fair); assign seats 擺攤子 baai2 taan1 zi2 = set up a stall; maintain a large staff and organization 報攤 bou3 taan1 = bookstall, news-stand 攤子 taan1 zi2 = a booth 檔攤 dong3 taan1 = a vice den; a drug den 粵 賭番攤 dou2 faan1 taan1 = to gamble at fantan 收攤 sau1 taan1 = to pack up the stall; to wind up the day's business or the work on hand 揸流攤 zaa1 lau4 taan1 = so so; not too good; just passable; lame 粵 攤攤腰 taan1 taan1 jiu1 = totally exhausted 粵 順攤 seon6 taan1 = describes things that are unexpectedly smooth-going 粵 攤凍 taan1 dung3 = cool down 粵 睇住檔攤 tai2 zyu6 dong3 taan1 = hold down the fort 粵 攤手 taan1 sau2 = dispersing hand |
||
Legend 國 : This term is used in Mandarin/Standard written Chinese, not Cantonese. 粵 : This term is used in Cantonese, not Mandarin/Standard written Chinese. No icon: This term is used in both Cantonese and Mandarin/Standard written Chinese. |