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  1. Chong (Thai: ภาษาชอง, also spelled Chawng, Shong, Xong) is an endangered language spoken in eastern Thailand and formerly in Cambodia by the Chong. It is a Western Pearic language in the Mon–Khmer language family. Chong is currently the focus of a language revitalization project in Thailand.

    • 500 (2007)
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ChongqingChongqing - Wikipedia

    Zhongshan Ancient Town, Jiangjin, Chongqing. The language native to Chongqing is Southwestern Mandarin. More precisely, the great majority of the municipality, save for Xiushan, speak Sichuanese, including the primary Chengdu-Chongqing dialect and Minjiang dialect spoken in Jiangjin and Qijiang.

    • 244 m (801 ft)
    • Cfa
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  4. There are several hundred languages in China. The predominant language is Standard Chinese, which is based on Beijingese, but there are hundreds of related Chinese languages, collectively known as Hanyu ( simplified Chinese: 汉语; traditional Chinese: 漢語; pinyin: Hànyǔ, 'Han language'), that are spoken by 92% of the population.

  5. Website: (Chinese) www.cq.gov.cn. (English) english.cq.gov.cn. Chongqing ( Simplified Chinese: 重庆; Traditional Chinese: 重慶; pinyin: Chóngqìng; Postal map spelling: Chungking; Wade-Giles: Ch'ung-ch'ing) is the largest and most populous of the People's Republic of China 's four provincial-level municipalities.

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  6. Chong is an endangered language spoken in eastern Thailand and formerly in Cambodia by the Chong. It is a Western Pearic language in the Mon–Khmer language family. Chong is currently the focus of a language revitalization project in Thailand.

  7. Mary Paik Lee, a Korean-American writer, brings up a taunt from the early 1900s in her autobiography, one even more acidic than the rhyme Bolton recounted: "Ching chong, Chinaman, Sitting on a ...

  8. Jul 14, 2014 · The term showed up again in Lee S. Roberts and J. Will Callahan's 1917 ragtime song, "Ching Chong": "Ching, Chong, Oh Mister Ching Chong,You are the king of Chinatown.Ching Chong, I love your sing-song,When you have turned the lights all down." Mimicry, particularly for mocking Asian accents, is the default pejorative mode, according to Kent ...

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