Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

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Default Another Puer chinese character

Here is a bing picture from TaoBao similar to the QiZi tong I took to
the PPP.

http://i40.tinypic.com/2z9acz8.jpg

A couple of days prior I discovered I didnt know the ? character. It
doesnt appear on my other bings. Looking at it I couldnt tell if it
was one character or two. I got into a panic when I came up with ¨õ
bei1 meaning inferior. I managed to come up with ¤ù pian4 meaning
slice. So it was an 'inferior slice'. Luckily I discovered ¤ù was a
Traditional radical so using that I looked up µP pai2 meaning brand.
The three characters mean China Tea Brand.

The top row from left to right reads Yun Nan Qi Zi Bing Cha. All the
characters at the bottom stand for Chinese National Native Produce or
CNNP for short (minus a few characters).

Jim

PS I spent a day running this one down since the component radical
didnt look like the standalone then. It does now.
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Default Another Puer chinese character

For those with browsers that are chinese disabled. You may have to
tap the image to increase the resolution to see the characters.

http://i39.tinypic.com/a2aikh.jpg

Jim

On Feb 19, 9:40 am, wrote:
> Here is a bing picture from TaoBao similar to the QiZi tong I took to
> the PPP.
>
> http://i40.tinypic.com/2z9acz8.jpg
>
> A couple of days prior I discovered I didnt know the ? character. It
> doesnt appear on my other bings. Looking at it I couldnt tell if it
> was one character or two. I got into a panic when I came up with ¨õ
> bei1 meaning inferior. I managed to come up with ¤ù pian4 meaning
> slice. So it was an 'inferior slice'. Luckily I discovered ¤ù was a
> Traditional radical so using that I looked up µP pai2 meaning brand.
> The three characters mean China Tea Brand.
>
> The top row from left to right reads Yun Nan Qi Zi Bing Cha. All the
> characters at the bottom stand for Chinese National Native Produce or
> CNNP for short (minus a few characters).
>
> Jim
>
> PS I spent a day running this one down since the component radical
> didnt look like the standalone then. It does now.

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