Vietnamese Dictation Course 1 ( Northern Dialect )
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This Vietnamese Vocabulary 1 will cover all these topics based on Complete Vietnamese course - Basic level A1:1. Greetings - Chào hỏi2. Nationality - Quốc tịch3. Occupation - Nghề nghiệp4. Address - Địa chỉ5. Time - Thời gian6. Date - Ngày tháng7. Giving direction - Chỉ đường8. Means of transport - Phương tiện giao thông9. Family - Gia đình10. Order food - Gọi mónEverything is in Northern DialectIn my opinion, the general terms Northern and Southern do not capture the many different accents and dialects of Vietnamese well enough. I once had a student who was linguistics. He studied the differences among Vietnamese accents from different provinces of Vietnam and created his own version of the Vietnam map of dialects comparing those differences. For a Vietnamese that had lived in Hanoi her whole life, back then, I was really taken aback by how little I knew about my own language. There's no standard Northern Vietnamese - there're just different Vietnamese dialects that change from North to South. I was born in Dong Anh - a town in the suburb of Hanoi. People here pronounce the letter e similar to ie. For example, mẹ (mom) would sound like mịe. When I moved to the Saigon to live for 1.5 years, I learned that there's no standard Southern Vietnamese either. People from the Mekong Delta area pronounce the letter e longer and pronounce r pretty much the same as how German and French pronounce their /r/. So đi ra (go out) would sound like dee zaa in Hanoi, dee raa in Saigon and dee gaa in Ben Tre for example. And then there's this north-southern mixed dialect that I've heard a lot in Saigon of people who speak with southern dấu sắc (up tone) but northern dấu ngã (wavy tone) and northern dấu nặng (dot tone). Most of those people that I know either have families from the north that moved to the south or are Viet Kieu (watch Paris By Night show and you'll hear most of them speaking with this accent). Central Vietnamese is the most difficult to define for me. The accent in Da Nang centre area is a lot similar to Saigon, but outside of this area and toward Hoi An, the accent has changed completely. I remember having no problem understanding people in Da Nang the first time I went there, but having a hard time communicating with people in Hoi An and Hue because I wasn't familiar with the accents. To decide which Vietnamese dialect to study, I believe you should examine the dialect's popularity as well as the geographical places where it is spoken. The northern dialect is extensively spoken in Vietnam's north, and it begins to shift considerably between Thanh Hoa and Vinh. Because it is the most similar to official Vietnamese, it is generally understood throughout Vietnam and other Vietnamese-speaking countries. Central Vietnamese dialects are more diverse in Vietnam's central region. Southern Vietnamese is largely spoken in Vietnam's south and among Vietnamese communities living outside of the country.

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