Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - It's too hot. How do you say it in Cantonese?

It's too hot. How do you say it in Cantonese?

In Cantonese, it means heat (phonetic symbol: hou2 jit6).

Hot means very hot, very hot. There are the following Cantonese words to describe "hot":

1, Jin re (phonetic symbol: ging6 jit6)

Interpretation: Very hot.

Example: It's really hot today! It is really hot today! )

2. Overheating (phonetic symbol: ciu 1 jit6)

Interpretation: super fire.

Example: It was too hot last night! It's really super hot at night! )

Extended data:

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The main dialects in Guangdong are:

1, Cantonese: When we talk in Cantonese, we will call Cantonese "vernacular", but when introducing it to non-Cantonese people, we may call it "Cantonese". Hong Kong people generally call Cantonese "Cantonese", and Cantonese is generally authentic in Cantonese.

2. Hakka dialect: Hakka dialect is the main dialect in Guangdong, with Meixian dialect in Meizhou City in the northeast corner of Guangdong as the authentic dialect. In addition, Heyuan City, Shaoguan City and Huizhou City are all Hakka dialects. Of course, Huizhou is close to Dongguan and Shenzhen, so the pronunciation may be different from Meizhou.

The pronunciation of Yuancheng District and Dongyuan County in Heyuan City is closer to Cantonese pronunciation than Meixian Hakka dialect. In addition, Hakka dialect is not only used in Guangdong, but also in Fujian, Jiangxi, Hunan, Guangxi, Taiwan Province Province and overseas.

3. Chaoshan dialect: Chaoshan dialect is a branch of Minnan dialect (the most difficult dialect to understand, but Cantonese people listen to Chaoshan dialect almost like listening to gobbledygook), but Chaoshan dialect may not be able to communicate directly with Fujian people without obstacles, because once Shantou students spoke Chaoshan dialect to local people in Quanzhou, Fujian Province, and as a result, people didn't fully understand it and finally spoke Mandarin.

Guangdong dialect is dominated by these three dialects, and the smallest ones are Yao dialect in Shaoguan, Leizhou dialect in Zhanjiang, Li dialect in Zhanjiang and Maoming. In addition, Cantonese is spoken in western Guangdong, such as Maoming, and its pronunciation is quite different from that in Guangzhou. I am a Hakka, I can listen to and speak standard Cantonese, but I can't understand Maoming.