Faux pas derived from Chinese pronunciation explained

The following faux pas are derived from homonyms in Mandarin and Cantonese. While originating in Greater China, they may also apply to Chinese-speaking people around the world. However, most homonymic pairs listed work only in some varieties of Chinese (for example, Mandarin only or Cantonese only), and may appear bewildering even to speakers of other varieties of Chinese.

Certain customs regarding good and bad luck are important to many Chinese people. Although these might be regarded as superstitions by people from other cultures, these customs are often tied to religious traditions and are an important part of many people's belief systems, even among well-educated people and affluent sectors of society.

Clocks

Giving a clock is often taboo, especially to the elderly as the term for this act is a homophone with the term for the act of attending another's funeral, "to send off for one's end" .[1] [2] [3] In 2015, a UK government official, Susan Kramer, gave a watch to Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je and was unaware of the taboo, which resulted in some professional embarrassment and a pursuant apology.[4] Cantonese people consider such a gift as a curse.[5]

This homonymic pair works in nearly all varieties of Chinese, as the words for 'clock' and 'end' came to be pronounced identically very early in mainstream Chinese varieties, by around the 11th century. That being said, this taboo does not apply to smaller items such as watches, as they are not called in most parts of China, unlike clocks and large bells. Watches are commonly given as gifts in China.

However, should such a gift be given, the "unluckiness" of the gift can be countered by exacting a small monetary payment so that the recipient is buying the clock and thereby counteracting the Chinese: '送' ("to gift") expression of the phrase.

Fans and umbrellas

It is undesirable to give someone a fan or an umbrella as a gift. The words for 'fan' and 'umbrella' sound like the word (Chinese: ), meaning to scatter, or to part company, to separate, to break up with someone, to split.[6]

These homonymic pairs work in Mandarin and Cantonese. Cantonese has a more idiomatic term for umbrellas (in Cantonese, ) to avoid precisely this association.

Books

As a book is a homophone of "loss, to lose" in many areas, carrying or looking at a book where people are taking a risk, such as gambling or investing in stocks, may be considered to invite bad luck and loss . This bad luck does not apply to carrying or reading newspapers as newspapers are not books.[6]

This homonymic pair works in Cantonese and Mandarin, with the avoidance particularly common in Cantonese-speaking areas.

See also

References

  1. Book: Brown, Ju. China, Japan, Korea Culture and Customs. 2006. 57.
  2. Book: Seligman, Scott D.. Chinese business etiquette:: a guide to protocol, manners, and culture in the People's Republic of China. 1999. Hachette Digital, Inc..
  3. http://www.sohu.com/a/160882715_578225 别人过节喜庆的时候,不送钟表。送终和送钟谐音。
  4. Web site: BBC Staff. UK minister apologises for Taiwan watch gaffe. BBC. 26 January 2015. 29 January 2018.
  5. Susan Kurth Clot deBroissia International Gift Giving Protocol
  6. Wong Yee Lee Gifts in Chinese Culture