Whittard of Chelsea to open stores in China amid growing demand
Whittard of Chelsea is making the bold move of turning history on its head by selling tea to China. The retailer is considering opening stores in the country and an online shop on Tmall.
Read MoreHow to express “too much” in Chinese
The phrase "too much" in English has many more uses than "太多" does in Chinese. Take a look at how to use this simple phrase correctly in Chinese.
Read MoreLearn Chinese with motivation
It's important to be aware of motivation and do you best to maintain and increase it during Chinese learning.
Read MoreOrigins and meanings of Chinese numerals “一二三”
The Chinese numbers were invented one by one, and not all at once. So it makes sense that the number one, which existed first, would affect how the number two looks. The same goes for the other numbers.
Read MoreScrapping of one-child policy postponed by population fear
China delayed scrapping its one-child policy out of fear that the population would expand too rapidly, a senior official said on Tuesday — despite the fact demographers say the birth rate was already dwindling before it was introduced in 1979.
Read MoreTaobao and Rural Taobao to launch Spring Festival shopping gala
Alibaba announced that it will create another online shopping event for Spring Festival in the next two months to tap further into rural consumption.
Read MoreRMB inclusion in IMF basket to commit China to financial reform
Back in 2009, the west was desperately seeking green shoots of recovery and paid little attention when Zhou Xiaochuan ca
Read MoreTips for active Chinese listening
This article will discuss the importance of active listening and various strategies you can use along with some tips and tricks on how to vary your active listening practice.
Read More沙发: the first comment on a post
US President Barack Obama must have raised a quizzical eyebrow upon seeing his microblog posts "occupied" by a flood of Chinese-language posts, after he registered a real-name account on the social network Google Plus.
Read MoreGrammatical differences between spoken and written Chinese
Now however, written and spoken Chinese are more alike, although compared with some other languages, there are still some obvious differences.
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