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Etymologies
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Examples
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YOU: scribbling furiously One… order… of… biang biang… noodles…
Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Noodling around with Chinese characters 2008
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Here, for example, is the biang biang character writ small:
Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Noodling around with Chinese characters 2008
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CUSTOMER TWO: Could you just write biang biang twice?
Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Noodling around with Chinese characters 2008
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What it means besides “Chinese is hard” is a kind of noodle, the biang biang noodle.
Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Noodling around with Chinese characters 2008
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I suspect this biang biang character is more gimmick than anything else, much like the Llanfairpwll railway station in Wales so many letters! so few vowels!
Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Noodling around with Chinese characters 2008
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Wah biang the first thing Mrs Hor said to me was "Wah how come your eyebags [made a horizontal line with her finger] .. and new hair ah!"
ianthopia Diary Entry ianthopia 2007
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Layout made and coded by Stephanie. (c) haha yay lit is everyday ahhhh got our timetable FOR THE REST OF THE 2+ MONTHS ahhh and WE GOT PE ON MONDAY. wah biang 4 slots leh!
ianthopia Diary Entry ianthopia 2007
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It was wonderful to watch him come back to life, till at last he could say, with his dreadful Provençal twang, that he felt "_très biang_."
Tatterdemalion John Galsworthy 1900
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In Chinatown, there are stimulating dishes like Mount Qi noodles from Shaanxi in the west of China, a hot and sour broth with minced pork and wide, stretchy noodles called "biang biang mian," after the noise the dough makes when it is snapped against the counter.
NYT > Home Page By JULIA MOSKIN 2011
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In Chinatown, there are stimulating dishes like Mount Qi noodles from Shaanxi in the west of China, a hot and sour broth with minced pork and wide, stretchy noodles called "biang biang mian," after the noise the dough makes when it is snapped against the counter.
NYT > Home Page By JULIA MOSKIN 2011
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