国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Looking for a success mantra for youth

By Wang Yiqing (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-05 08:20

Diaosi, gaofushuai and baifumei are terms that people usually use to denote different groups of Chinese youth. The terms not only describe the social status of youngsters, but also point to some underlying social problems.

Not surprisingly, the three terms were among the top 10 Internet buzzwords of 2012, according to the list prepared by the National Language Resource Monitoring and Research Center on Network Media of Central China Normal University.

Gaofushuai (tall, rich and handsome guy) and baifumei (white, rich and beautiful girl) derive their literal meanings from Chinese. But diaosi has a special and complex meaning in China's cyberspace. The word diaosi was first used on Baidu tieba, a Chinese bulletin board system (BBS), to describe fans of former Chinese soccer player Li Yi, who were infamous for using dirty language, or people using the Internet as a platform to bemoan their unsatisfactory career and life. But later diaosi came to mean a "loser" who lacked good looks, wealth and social resources.

Interestingly, the majority of people using the Internet on the Chinese mainland are happy to embrace the loser's label, and only a few say they are rich. Many white-collar workers, graduate students and intellectuals love to call themselves diaosi. Even Han Han, the best-selling author, famous racing driver and popular and handsome advertisement star, has called himself "a pure diaosi from a rural area of Shanghai".

Gaofushuai and baifumei can only be "another" person for most of the people using the Internet, and the term even has a pejorative connotation. For example, Guo Meimei, infamous for her charity scandal, is called a baifumei.

But the popularity of the term diaosi is something more than self-mockery. It conveys youngsters' discontent with inequity and the wealth gap.

The significant difference between gaofushuai, baifumei and diaosi is not whether a person is rich or not, but how he/she has amassed wealth, if any. In particular, gaofushuai and baifumei refer to youngsters who were born with the proverbial silver spoon in their mouth, while diaosi are those who were born into families that were neither affluent nor resourceful.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

The unique loanwords in our daily life By zoe_ting

In our daily life, more and more loanwords appear and change our habits in Chinese expression. Loanwords sound very similar with their original English words, and the process of learning them is full of fun to foreign students.

Going "home" for the first time in four years By SharkMinnow

It has been a while since I've contributed to this Forum and I figured that since now I am officially on summer holiday and another school year is behind me I would share a post with you.

...
即墨市| 德化县| 彭州市| 宁远县| 南昌县| 香港| 平昌县| 四会市| 海安县| 科技| 红原县| 安义县| 宕昌县| 诏安县| 志丹县| 莲花县| 陇川县| 建昌县| 巫溪县| 津南区| 安丘市| 太白县| 东乌珠穆沁旗| 彭阳县| 微山县| 林周县| 沛县| 大足县| 呼图壁县| 松江区| 安陆市| 长武县| 棋牌| 仙居县| 封丘县| 贵阳市| 裕民县| 南皮县| 姜堰市| 南昌市| 莱阳市|