The mixture of the two languages Mandarin Chinese (Zhongwen), and French (Français) in writing or speaking.
Ex. Jessica aime tiao wu et Zhongçais, mais ta bu xihuan nettoyer fangzi.
chinese mandarin french zhongwen francais blending languages conversation writing zhongçais
chinese mandarin french zhongwen francais blending languages conversation writing zhongçais
by Sylvie Cai September 5, 2011
Get the Zhongçais mug.this is a famous Genshin Impact ship that usually has Childe as the bottom we rarely see him as the top. Zhongli is mostly top for no reason the fandom probably likes it.
by sussynugget October 13, 2022
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by zhongchi April 3, 2021
Get the zhongchi mug.Religion of the horny Genshin players who simp for Zhongli. Their god is obviously known as Zhongli. Worshipping Zhongli's ass and enjoying Zhongli's pillar memes 24/7. Those who didn't get Zhongli in the game and fall into this category/religion are probably depressed.
by Zhonglisdong August 24, 2021
Get the Zhonglism mug.(n) The mangled, garbled, butchered, malapropriated or trashed Chinese spoken by native speakers of English.
Pronunciation notes: Similar to Joan-glish. The ZH is NOT pronounced like the S in "fusion" but like the DGE in fudge.
Origin: "zhong" is taken directly from the first syllable of the Mandarin word for Chinese; "lish" is from English, of course.
Usage: Zhonglish is the mirror image of Chinglish but is less likely to be hurled as an insult. It is amusing, not abusing, and is usually applied to learners of Mandarin, although it could conceivably be applied to Wu, Cantonese, or others.
History: "Zhonglish" has been used by learners of Chinese at least since the early 1960s.
Pronunciation notes: Similar to Joan-glish. The ZH is NOT pronounced like the S in "fusion" but like the DGE in fudge.
Origin: "zhong" is taken directly from the first syllable of the Mandarin word for Chinese; "lish" is from English, of course.
Usage: Zhonglish is the mirror image of Chinglish but is less likely to be hurled as an insult. It is amusing, not abusing, and is usually applied to learners of Mandarin, although it could conceivably be applied to Wu, Cantonese, or others.
History: "Zhonglish" has been used by learners of Chinese at least since the early 1960s.
Bemused by Kevin's Zhonglish, the Beijinger said kindly, "You speak very well -- it sounds like you're singing a song."
by Beijing Sounds January 27, 2008
Get the Zhonglish mug.A really cool person 😏😏
by Fruityskewer July 16, 2021
Get the zhonglissugardaddie mug.omg your such a zhonglispiggybank!
by roadmanj2trappy June 29, 2021
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