As a Thai-Chinese the gov never forced anything on us to be Thai we considered ourselves to be Thai and yes we know where we came from but in Thai the concept of race classification is not our problem like other countries and about the durian thing thai people like to eat it a little crunchy outside and soften on the inside while other countries like it tree ripened so if you want that kind of durian just ask the seller for that 😊
@tweedy4sg Жыл бұрын
Appears you don't know much about Thailand's history, do you ? Your gov't started in 1930s a forced assimilation policy of Chinese migrants. Just google if you don't believe me. And your identifying yourself more as a Thai rather than a Chinese shows the success of the policy on Chinese people. But you know that many muslims in south Thailand don't see themselves as Thais, but as Malays. Nothing wrong with that, its history. Just that forced assimilation policy is less acceptable in the world nowadays.
@Watchalone Жыл бұрын
@@tweedy4sg lol 😂 as long as I have peace in my country without the race war like other I don’t mind what you trying to say.
@tweedy4sg Жыл бұрын
@@Watchalone Amen to that
@HK-dw5rk Жыл бұрын
@@tweedy4sg the thai PM who force chinese in to thai he also chinese descent
@Iceyfire12 Жыл бұрын
@@tweedy4sg the Tais are originally Chinese to begin starting from Sukhothai 800 yrs ago!!! Thailand is a mixtures of a lot of cultures but w/ their own twist to make it original to Siam!
@SecondProtagonist Жыл бұрын
In Thailand do not ask people where are they from or what race you are?. for me It's kinda rude question. Every ethnicity in Thailand are considered as a Thai citizen So we have Thai-chinese , Thai-indian , Thai-mon . most of them do not speak another languages. I prefer you talk to them in English They will more understandable than other language. bc we taught English in school. Thank you to visit Thailand :D
@@urBoyCJ every westerner in Thailand who speaks a little Thai language just call themselves farang
@prasitkoysiripong5150 Жыл бұрын
I am a Chinese Thai who live in Phuket south of Thailand.Both of my parents are Chinese from Fujian.Majority of Phuket local are Hokkien(Fujian). Not many of them can Hokkien any more.However Chinese Hokkien cultures are well preserved. The Chinese Thai assimilate very wellto Thai society.The Chinese Thai can be succesful in every profession.That's why the Chinese love both Thailand and China. China is ancestral land, Thailand is the land we were born. We are proud to be Chinese Thai. For me I love to see Thailand and China being brothers and support each other.
@primasiriboonsong8629 Жыл бұрын
Most thai ppl like crunchy durian. If you like soft or mellow one you can ask the vendor.
@motarasti4 ай бұрын
She said she like creamy durian. Not thai style. Creamy durian are too ripe.
@poomlertpinyowong9187 Жыл бұрын
I am a 100% Teochew who was born and raised in Bangkok. My grandfathers were Chinese immigrants. My grandmothers were Chinese who were born in Thailand. I can't speak Chinese at all. Both my first and last names are Thai (with some mixture of Sanskrit). Usually, Thai-Chinese keep their Chinese family name in their Thai last name. For example, a politician Pita Limcharoenrat. His Chinese family name is Lim. However, my family didn't do that. My Chinese family name is 蔡 Chua (teochew) or Tsai. The history of Chinese people in Thailand can be traced back more than 500 years. King Taksin the Great who founded Thonburi (the west side of Bangkok) was a Teochew and there is a theory that the mother of King Rama I was a Hokkien. (The current king is Rama X.) There was a Chinese community in Bangkok before King Rama I made it the capital of the Kingdom. Originally, they lived in the area that now became the Royal Palace. When King Rama I built the palace, the Chinese moved down to the area now known as Sampeng, Talat Noi, and Yaowarat (Chinatown, the name Yaowarat was given after the young King Rama V visited the place. It literally means 'visiting of the young king.') Some moved across the Chao Praya river to Kudi Chin. That was like 240 years ago. These are not the only places to find Thai-Chinese. Actually, they are everywhere in Bangkok. Those places are just concentrated areas. As you can see, Thai-Chinese foods, like Kuay Tew (noodles), are being sold everywhere and I am not gonna lie Thai-Chinese foods in Chinatown are not the best haha. Thai-Chinese can be found not only in Bangkok. They are everywhere in Thailand., especially in big cities and cities by the sea. Actually, more than 10% of Thai people are Thai-Chinese.
Bai Yue..Ethnic groups who inhabited the regions of Southern China.InThe local minority speaks a Thai language related to northern Thai, a language spoken in Chiang Mai! When I tried to speak with a lady at a ‘Thai’ restaurant south of the Mekong river, I realised they use words in common with central Thai like ‘mai’ (wood), ‘nam’ (liquid) and ‘phak’ (vegetable), but their words for greetings were totally different from central Thai (‘sawasdee krap’), and so was the their word for rice (‘kao’ in central Thai). The touristic concrete architecture is Thai-inspired, but there are old houses with Thai style too, and there are buddhist monks. If the current hypotheses are true, the Thai population of Thailand emanate from the Shan states in Burma which emanate from southern Yunnan.
@ImXamm1474 Жыл бұрын
If you are randomly pick some food, fruit, drink or whatever and It's turn bad It doesn't mean that food represent all Thai food you know such as The durian you were mention in this video There are a lot of creamy durian in general. Speaking like do not eat durian in Thailand because It's texture like an apple quite . . .
@tc2334 Жыл бұрын
I also felt that. It's like saying you ate a bad dan ta pastry in Hong Kong, so you shouldn't eat them there. Just go to Guangzhou instead. It was a weird take.
@maxdc988 Жыл бұрын
Are you a Thai durian seller? Why so sensitive? C'mon just a personal Vlog, not a public announcement. 😂
@tc2334 Жыл бұрын
@@maxdc988 Thailand is the world’s biggest producer of durian. 😂 It isn’t being being sensitive to point out that the girl in the video’s judgment may have been a bit harsh. Deeming Thailand sucks at durian because you had bad durian one time in Thailand is almost like eating bad pasta one time in Italy and telling people to eat American pasta instead.
@whatevero_0450 Жыл бұрын
@@maxdc988just a suggestion though not blaming.
@FridayN354 ай бұрын
When food is bad they said not their food blame to other race lmao what a joke people for this country
@ethancox4459 Жыл бұрын
我也是潮州人!看到泰国有那么多潮州人好亲切!❤
@tanyam2349 Жыл бұрын
But China imported durian from Thailand. You have to try different durian. We have different kind of durian here. Soft , hard, or crunchy outside but soft inside. Hope you try the original in Thailand ❤ I personally love the soft and creamy one. Yummy 🤤
@solopang3687 Жыл бұрын
Exactly 🙌
@feifeifern Жыл бұрын
You’re right. Most durians in china were imported from Thailand. Thai and Chinese like different kind of durian. You can choose the durian you like by telling seller
@o0somic0o Жыл бұрын
Exactly, I was surprised how confidently she said that about Durian...clearly she knows nothing.
@maxdc988 Жыл бұрын
GG 's second or rather third home is Malaysia. Her father lives in Malaysia. You know the reason now? 😂
@aenaluck Жыл бұрын
@Max DC Oh, I see 🤔😆
@garychan9456 Жыл бұрын
我是香港的潮州人,看到曼谷唐人街,那麼多的潮州人,真的很有親切感。
@nutta68able Жыл бұрын
Ka ki nang
@nutta68able Жыл бұрын
我也是華裔在泰國,我家是潮州人
@JL-oi8di Жыл бұрын
泰國有近一千萬華人,已同化入泰國,難怪泰國菜咁似中菜又用筷子
@arbs3ry Жыл бұрын
@@JL-oi8di 好似基本上就系食面先用筷子,其他嘅用汤匙同叉多d
@Iceyfire12 Жыл бұрын
@@JL-oi8di most Thais use Fork and Spoons not chopsticks! Now if they are eating noodle soup of course they’ll use chopstick!!!
@Keepintouchthailand Жыл бұрын
In Thailand have the very ripe durian too, you just ask seller then they will give you.But they show crunchy outside and soft inside texture because so many Thai love the texture.
@solhun5636 Жыл бұрын
As a Thai-Chinese like others, we think that we are 100% Thai. Because Language culture here which is Thai is very powerful (in the good way). if you can speak or understand it, in my opinion you will find that other people you work with or communicate with feel like your family. I think it is a heart-warming language even though there are many bad words, we can still use with closed friend like the word Bitch 55 I don't know how to explain. But i think it is about the language. So if you understand Thai language you will know.
@abbielee1555 Жыл бұрын
Totally understand and respect bro.
@ถ.วัวลายตําบลหายยา8 ай бұрын
Bai Yue..Ethnic groups who inhabited the regions of Southern China.InThe local minority speaks a Thai language related to northern Thai, a language spoken in Chiang Mai! When I tried to speak with a lady at a ‘Thai’ restaurant south of the Mekong river, I realised they use words in common with central Thai like ‘mai’ (wood), ‘nam’ (liquid) and ‘phak’ (vegetable), but their words for greetings were totally different from central Thai (‘sawasdee krap’), and so was the their word for rice (‘kao’ in central Thai). The touristic concrete architecture is Thai-inspired, but there are old houses with Thai style too, and there are buddhist monks. If the current hypotheses are true, the Thai population of Thailand emanate from the Shan states in Burma which emanate from southern Yunnan.
@JarnAon Жыл бұрын
you missed that not eating Durian in Thailand. it depends on what you ask to seller that which spicies and what do you expect on raw one or ripe one. the ripe one will be creamy and taste will be sweet. i recommend you try it next time :)
Chinatown in Bangkok is one of the biggest in the world and the people here have lived here for many generations for the most part and as you found out, most of them are Teochews. If you go south to Phuket as such, you'll find more Hokkien/Hakka similar to that seen in Malaysia/Singapore. However, you do not have to go to Chinatown to find Thai-Chinese (Though in Chinatown, they may be more recent immigrants), across Bangkok and Thailand you'll find Thai-Chinese people but they may be more or less disconnected from their Chinese roots and will always identify as Thai first and foremost like "I'm Thai but I have some Chinese blood" kinda thing. I think something around 14% of the Thai population is ethnic Chinese and a further 40-45% has some Chinese roots/blood but I don't think you could get get by speaking Mandarin/Chinese dialects since most people know very little or none at all. Bangkok is a melting pot of people from all parts of Thailand and provinces so some people may be from the Northeast (Isan Area), some from the North, South etc. Thailand is also very diverse in general so it's hard to define a "Thai" person genetically since we're all Thai!, Southern Thailand has a lot of Malays, Northern Thais are heavily Tai-Lanna (Descended from Tai tribes in China many centuries ago), Northeastern Thais may be a mix of Tai-Isaan (similar to Laos) and Khmer from Cambodia. We're all mixed but fall under the umbrella term of being Thai so it is very different from the Chinese you may have encountered in Malaysia/Singapore who generally hold onto their Chinese roots very strongly. I'm half English-Thai, but on my mothers side my Grandad was ethnically Chinese (though he did not identify as Chinese) and my Grandma had some Chinese blood too, so my mum has Chinese blood but we do not really partake in many Chinese traditions/very lax about it and of course, we speak 0 Chinese apart from what we learnt in school/through the internet. My mum is also from Buriram (a province in Northeastern Thailand) which is close to the Cambodian border, so I think my maternal side is a mix of Thai, Cambodian and Chinese but I'm not willing to pay $200 for a testing kit to find out as much as I want to lol.
@aburn9891 Жыл бұрын
@@chessonso2610As I mentioned, depends greatly on the family (and preservation of roots) and the recency of immigration.
Yea, basically Thai Chinese are more like Italian Americans or German Americans, they don't have much to do with the place where their great grand fathers came from.
@TK_kalycha Жыл бұрын
thai-chinese population is 10 million from 66 million wich is alot as a thai-chinese we naver saw people separate the other it very hard to find FULL THAI on these days you can see thai-lao, thaiyai and alot of mix people in Thailand
@monkeypant44 Жыл бұрын
Ka Ki Lang is Hokkien Ka Ki Nang is Teochew Both have the same meaning of own people (自己人)
@laikokhua946 Жыл бұрын
,,潮州人 ,,自己人 TEOCHEW NANG GAGI NANG 5555
@U_Canton_1911 Жыл бұрын
客家人?
@jcc1320 Жыл бұрын
kai gi lang is hokkien。 潮州话也是闽南话(福建话)分支,闽南人可以听个大概。
@davidwong3613 Жыл бұрын
Teochew Nang - ka chng ang ang !!!!!
@brianliew5901 Жыл бұрын
@@davidwong3613 Pang sai ji kok ji kok....pang niu nor kar thang.
Too ripe durian will be mushy and have a strong smell, not delicious! We Thai people can eat fresh fruit that ripe just right, Not too raw until hard, Not ripe to the point of being mushy. So why do we have to eat fruits that are ripe until they are soft and smell bad? So juicy that it's close to mushy? Especially the durian, which has a crispy outside and just the right amount of soft inside. The smell won't be too strong. Thai people think this is most delicious. The durian is not yet ripe and quite crisp. We usually process it by cutting it into thin pieces and frying it, similar to chips. For durian that is ripe until it's very mushy, it's stirred with sugar, similar to Japanese red bean yokan. But we don't eat it fresh. It's similar for mangoes. However, some varieties have a sour taste when they are not yet ripe. We Thai people eat sour mango with dip. Or use it to make salad ... But I understand. Ripe fruit is very difficult to transport. Foreigners may have difficulty to eat it and it must expencive.
1900, 800,00k Chinese are already in Thailand.. Most.thai Bangkok are mix with Laos descent and become and call Thailand.. are Thai people...Like Laos now just allowing Chinese in and migration to Laos..
@chung388 Жыл бұрын
CHINA IMMIGRATION TO THAILAND 1900 800K PEOPLES..Most Thai people are mix with Chinese and Laos descent and call them thai...Most thai people today are actually Laos people mix with Chinese. .
@kritsada1482 Жыл бұрын
You don't need to go to Yaowarat. To find people of Chinese descent because 40% in Thailand are Chinese descent you can find them everywhere. And most importantly, there are no Thai people with 100% Thai ancestry. This country has many races gathered together and called themselves Thai. Like America without real Americans. Everyone is from Europe.
@Sophia-bm7pb Жыл бұрын
Why Thai has so many different races? I noticed that their faces are very different, some look like Indian, some look like Chinese, some look like Malaysian...
I believe most of those messy wires are fibre cable, internet cable and telephone cable(some are from companies that rent the poles from MEA, finished using it and didnt bother to get rid of it). The electrical ones are at the top and not really messy.
@ahcombintapasit89174 күн бұрын
ประเทศไทย อินเตอร์เน็ตเร็วกว่า มาเลย์เซีย
@Nathanyork361 Жыл бұрын
There are a lot Chinese ethnic living in Southeast Asia, infact a lot of them dominate the high ranking and bussiness positions in a lot of capital cities as well. If you go to the capital of Cambodia, Thai, Malaysia, there are a huge Techeow, Hakka, Hokkein, and more Chinese that assimilated into their respected county they live in.
@preharonce Жыл бұрын
Thai Chinese approximately 22M , pure Thai-Chinese 7M , mixed-blood 14M
I missed a lot speaking Teochew. My Grandfather migrated from Chaozhou to a small town in West Borneo, Indonesia. And now i live in Ho Chi Minh City. And I just realize in Vietnam the chinese imigrant are mostly speak Cantonese although i found some people speak Hokkien and Teochew. Also the food in Chinatown Bangkok really similiar with my childhood food back when i was in hometown. In Ho Chi Minh City, the chinese food is kinda more to Cantonese style which are very different with Teochew Food.
@maxdc988 Жыл бұрын
Vietnam is next to Guangdong, hence more Cantonese people there. 😃
@shileimrli8413 Жыл бұрын
@@maxdc988 Vietnam is next to GuangXi, not Guangdong
@hingzai66896 ай бұрын
@@shileimrli8413 both of them used to belong together and it’s was called: Liangguang (兩廣)
@ikkue Жыл бұрын
Young Chinese people in Bangkok are concentrated in Huai Khwang. Chinatown on Yaowarat Road was the original one formed from communities of Hokkien, Teochew, and Hakka Chinese immigrants almost over a century ago.
@JamieRedknap5 ай бұрын
Huaykhwang is chinese foreigner. Yaowarat is chinese that citizen
FYI, the place you went. "Yaowarat" is the place of Chinese immigrant during 70+ years ago. They are from Chaozhou and Shantou. They dont speak Mandarin. Nowaday, in Bangkok business district office workers, if you randomly ask if their ancestor came from Chinese ? the answer will be "yes" more than 70%. but they cant speak Chinese, because they dont speak Chinese at home. This is very difeerent to Malaysia that most of Chinese-malaysian speak Chinese as mother tongue
@jackchen60098 ай бұрын
I Singapore now staying in Thailand. In Singapore I speak English, mandarin, hokkian. But in Bangkok I speak to Thai every day. Because I love Thai language n I find Thai speaking got many similarities with Chinese speaking.
@lkp3335 Жыл бұрын
Chinese people been coming to Thailand since near 900 years ago as merchant. Some believe that Thai ancestor is actually migrated Chinese/Juang people. Chinese-Thai are everywhere from north to south since Thailand been the great location for trading since the past. You can randomly ask someone if they have chinese ancestor even they look totally non-chinese at all. I love this diversity
@THOA-01 Жыл бұрын
My mother is Chinese but she grow in Thailand, She can't speak Chinese but able to understand simple sentence since the grand parent generation did not speak Chinese all the time. Me who is half Thai-Chinese don't speak or understand Chinese at all but we still hold Chinese ritual like Chinese New Year, Hungry Ghost Festival and Qingming Festival every year and it's been over 30 years for me already. Probably people who live in Yaowarat area (China Town) still talking Chinese as they use it daily to China tourist as well
@jackchen60098 ай бұрын
I moved to Bangkok 10 years ago n I speak Thai every day. No much different from china language. I can speak after 3 months staying in Thailand. I originally from Singapore.
your attitude about durian lore says a lot about you
@TechAI_with_JRАй бұрын
This is the exact comment I was looking for.
@journeywithcat Жыл бұрын
Actually quite a lot of Chinese in Thailand is from Teochew
@alexoolau Жыл бұрын
Forced integration into Thai nationality by banning Chinese name/identity. It is illegal for Chinese descendants to have a Chinese sounding name.
@PuppyP40 Жыл бұрын
As a second generation of Chinese Thai, my parents born in Thailand but they both cannot speak Chinese, my dad birth registered name was Chinese but he changed to Thai name later to avoid discremination in school But myself I am proud to be Thai with Chinese background. I enjoyed traveling to HK, Mainland and TW a lot
@Vazter Жыл бұрын
Most of Thais people prefer unripe Durian , They love crunchy and not too sweet Durian
@chawalak Жыл бұрын
You're right, but I am the minority here who prefers ripe Durian.
@tc2334 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of when I went to an Asian grocery in Atlanta in the US. I overheard the ladies speaking Mandarin behind the counter and asked where they were from (in Mandarin). To my surprise, they were Thai...which explained the overwhelming amount of Thai and other southeast Asian goods in the store as opposed to Chinese stuff too.
@kyogofurahashi Жыл бұрын
, I di t think they r from thailand, no thai people speak mandarin to each other, I think they were from Taiwan, most people in he West always get confused between thailand and taiwan
@tc2334 Жыл бұрын
@@kyogofurahashi I live in Beijing. I was just visiting the US. They were definitely Thai and not Taiwanese. There are Thai people that can and do speak Mandarin to each other, but not many. It's most likely the case that they're newer Thai-Chinese (as opposed to the old Hakka, Hokkien, populations that came over a lot earlier). You're right though. Western people do mix Thailand and Taiwan a lot. My ex was Taiwanese. Happened to him all the time.
@kyogofurahashi Жыл бұрын
@@tc2334 I have not come across such thais in my life, it's hard to beleive, I am not saying that ur story was untrue I have a feeling that those mandarin speaking thais are probaly recent mainland chinese settlers who just arrived in thailand
@tc2334 Жыл бұрын
@@kyogofurahashi I agree that it's hard to believe as well. That's why I said "To my surprise" 😂 I think that either their parents moved to Thailand or they themselves may have moved to Thailand very young then migrated to America in adulthood, but I will say that their accent in Mandarin was very strange. The Taiwanese/Fujian accent is very distinct. That wasn't their accent. The way they spoke didn't sound like Mandarin was the only language they grew up with.
@goyam2981 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised lots of people in the clip can speak Mandarin. My dad could speak a little because he learned it in school when he was little. But in general Chinese people in Thailand even the older ones don't speak Mandarin. Maybe there are a lot of tourists from mainland China nowadays so store owners/shopkeepers try to learn to speak to customers. Yes, Chinese tourists in Thailand do go to Chinatown. Lol. Different foods.
@xiangkho68444 ай бұрын
I'm Teo chew Nang born at Indonesia. I love so much : pork meat rice, baby rip and pork roasted at Thai.
@ptaing8 Жыл бұрын
Thai king's ancestor is from my hometown, Chao Zhou.
@mapych5051 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see you guys thanks for your visit. Enjoy your trip♡♡♡
If u know someone from thailand has long surname (More than 4 syllabels), u can assume they have chinese ancestor. Because 50-60 years ago every thai- chinese family had to create new surname instead of one syllabel chinese surname. So every family tried to create long and good meaning surname. 50 years ago ,My uncle were who create my family surname( 8 syllabels.) But now , by thai law, if want build new surname , it cannot be over 5 syllabels.
@sayajinmamuang Жыл бұрын
Yes i also learned this from my aunt who is 100% thai. She told me if they have long last name it means they are Chinese. Like for example chitawanukul. The kul is a dead give away.
@sleekslack Жыл бұрын
for example, look at my surname XD that'd assure you
@Bunbun-f8e Жыл бұрын
This is correct haha. My Chinese grandparent combined all the good Thai word tgt and then become the long Thai surname loll
@thanaang1455 Жыл бұрын
Near Chinese embassy in Bangkok, there are many new generation Chinese setting up new business.
@Piyawat1985 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for good video and welcome to Thailand. As a Thai-Chinese people, we are proud to be Thai people and we never feel different or discriminated from others in Thailand as well as other religions. Thai Durion is the most famous and tasty if you know how to select and must try so based on your favorite and tasty. Monthong Durion is the most famous and tasty for me and for many people with number one exported to China. And recommended to not ask the word “ladyboy” to other people especially old people that we should respect but it might be ok if you have close Thai friend. 🙏😁🇹🇭🥰
@meyo_lin Жыл бұрын
Nice work GG!!
@eye0807 Жыл бұрын
Bangkok China town is amazing. Great food !
@tiamxiang Жыл бұрын
It amazes me for them to find it fascinating that there's a lot of Chinese people, culture, influence, signboards, food etc... in Chinatown. In Chinatown...
@yk5095 Жыл бұрын
The last restaurant is actually with Michelin Stars..
@piggyprotector6997 Жыл бұрын
Hi GG, can you tell Lingoda to start a Mandarin lesson too? There are many people abroad who want to learn Mandarin. Btw, your Mandarin improved a lot! Would you like to share it with us? Thank you
@UzumakiNaruto-ln9kg Жыл бұрын
im teochew too!!! from singapore 😊
@copa8 Жыл бұрын
Large percentage of Thais have some partial Chinese ancestry. Surprised to learn that the current royal family was founded by a king who is partly Chinese. Also, lots of former prime ministers were of ethnic Chinese ancestry.
@laikokhua946 Жыл бұрын
Shinawatra family
@HK-dw5rk Жыл бұрын
General Piboonsongkram thai PM who want unify thai and chinese. he is chinese descent
@Brandon-si8dl Жыл бұрын
no only 10% have chinese ancestry. there are chinese have thai ancestry in china too kadai barbarians (baiyue)
@MaI26982 Жыл бұрын
@@Brandon-si8dl 40% and we’re not barbarian
@jonnyynag Жыл бұрын
มีเชื้อสายจีนแต่ไม่ใช้คนจีน
@chaloemphonhuaihongthong3847 Жыл бұрын
ยินดีต้อนรับนักท่องเที่ยว
@dominoaffabatelal6731 Жыл бұрын
Wow Chinese in Thailand so cute.
@blue-xb1cq Жыл бұрын
@1:17 - Singapore executed 2 people dealing with something like that this past month or two.
@Luke923256 ай бұрын
Mandarin, a language originated in the northern part of China, is not the mother tongue of most Thai Chinese as most of their forefathers hailed from the Chaoshan region in China. The dominant language (not dialect in my opinion) spoken by the older generation is Teochew.
@StreeT_HobbY Жыл бұрын
I’m Thai I live in USA for 18 years but I’m born in Thailand I came to USA when i was20-21 years old to study master degree after that I didn’t back to Thailand even once. But I’ll move back there I next year.I live here in Thailand for 20 years I know a lot Chinese people in china town but I never know they all can speak Chinese I always think They speak mainly Thai and some of them speak some Chinese and probably speak a little Chinese. I was wrong all along. Thank you I has lean new things .hope you guys enjoy there and happy eating spend time like slow life relax take a rest in Thailand.
@趙耿耿 Жыл бұрын
汕头很多人以前就在泰国定居生活 ,我爷爷奶奶叫泰国也叫暹罗 ,很多亲戚现在也是定居在泰国曼谷那边。
@Brook.007 Жыл бұрын
🇹🇭🇨🇳❤❤
@blue-xb1cq Жыл бұрын
@1:00 - Teochew has 8 tones ( 6 for Cantonese and 4 for Mandarin ) . His tones sounded like "bite the people" ( not "our own people" ). Another "lang" tone means penis - so yes it does sounded like "bite the/a penis" ( @1:57 for example and GG's pronounciation of "teochew" is not understandable to a Teochew person)
@修-x5d Жыл бұрын
美女與大佬聯合發片…支持
@narainchunhatham3801 Жыл бұрын
You're Welcome to visit Chinatown, Yaowaraj so I'm Thai-Chinese too & understand your Chainese such as "Kakeenung" it's Teachew of my parent natives Language. Do hope you will enjoy to meet New Amazing Experiences & Happiness from BKK.....welcome
@shiweicai4872 Жыл бұрын
Great stuffs.
@xavierchung6004 Жыл бұрын
GG怎麼有辦法這麼可愛!❤😊
@ThanasetKundilokvanich Жыл бұрын
FYI, we ate crispy one not like other or whoever who ate the rotten one that we called "ทุเรียนปลาร้า" it's low quality durian here in Thailand. you can pick the most expensive Musang king or any and the cheapest Thai durian Montong we always choose Montong over and over. So that is the most disrespectful to our durian.
@jetliew2755 Жыл бұрын
I said exactly the same thing 12:09 hahaha Seriously good! Especially their roasted pork belly!
@urBoyCJ Жыл бұрын
Damn how did you miss the noodles at the last restaurant ?? Their signature is the noodles with crispy pork with clear pepper broth MUST TRY!
@t.chattirak4263 Жыл бұрын
As a Thai (Chinese 3rd generation), I am not considered to be part of China in any way. I don't speak Chinese and I am not proud to be Chinese blood either. Whenever China won the Olympics or whatsoever, I don't feel happy or anything. Sorry, it is just my opinion.
@icet6665 Жыл бұрын
LO L SUCH SELF HATE AND A MISERABLE EXISTENCE,
@ohreallyandthen189 Жыл бұрын
most thai-chinese feel that and me too. I have seen some Chinese people seem to exited when they see Thai-Chinese but as a Thai Chinese , I never feel into China.
@t.chattirak4263 Жыл бұрын
@@icet6665sorry I am considered that I am Thai. And very proud of being Thai. 😂 I think most of Thai Chinese like me feel the same way from my generation.
@icet6665 Жыл бұрын
@@t.chattirak4263 Of course, Americans feel proud to be Americans. Same thing and Singaporeans feel proud to be Singaporean. LOL British Indians feel proud to be British and still eat curry and dance to their Indian music. A lot of things Thai originated from South China , so there is already the sharing of the same culture like the the numbers one two three , and they are the same.
@icet6665 Жыл бұрын
@@ohreallyandthen189 BECAUSE THE CULTURE AND RELIGION ARE SIMILAR, SO NO NEED TO FEEL DIFFERENT.
@tripontube365 Жыл бұрын
3:31 Don't eat durian in Thailand ? What ! You don't know how to choose a ripe durian ? before you buy you should tell the vendor you like a little bit crispy meat (an Apple feeling in your view) or creamy durian (riper durian).
@scorpio252000 Жыл бұрын
At 5:51, It's funny that you say they are both speaking Chinese but they couldn't understand each other. But in reality to say that one speaks Chinese is like someone saying they speak a romance language, well there are different romance languages just like there are different Chinese languages. Someone speaking French may not understand someone speaking Italian yet they both are Romance languages; likewise, someone speaking Mandarin may not understand Teochew, Hakka, or Cantonese.
@arabianrichguy9828 Жыл бұрын
If you call him Chinese, he will be angry for some people He accepted the word that Thai people with Chinese descent and adapt to Thai society peacefully
@haisonwu7292 Жыл бұрын
Amazing,your mandarin&Cantonese are so good!
@mty.4649 Жыл бұрын
The last restaurant is a famous one, as a Thai I recommend.
Needless to ask, all the Chinese descendants in Thailand (by this generation) are all born in Thailand and not China. Their elderly parents can speak Teochew more than Mandarin cos they grew up in a Teochew-speaking and Thai-speaking environment at home, not Mandarin speaking (which they picked up much later in life due to influx of PRC tourists). Lastly, the shop you guys visited for lunch at the end of the video is one of the most famous ones in Yaowarat/Chinatown and braised stuff and soupy stuff is a very Teochew style of cooking (you will find similar food at places such as Shenzhen or Shantou etc). It's a pity you guys did not revisit Chinatown in the night (till 1am or so) cos it will transform into a buzzling nigh food street with over 200 stall/shops and you will have plenty of choices for food.
@Luke923256 ай бұрын
(1:04) It's NOT 'Kaki Lang ', it's 'Kaki Nang'. A pronunciation error that most cantonese speakers made
@Ajjiam Жыл бұрын
The new generation of Chinese(3rd-4the generation) china town have very good education. They have good opportunity in career so most of them do not continue their parent's business. Beside they move out to the new housing area where has more space and less traffic.
@tanin200 Жыл бұрын
Only bad parts of this clip is your bias about durian. There are 9 of main varieties that we have in our country. The one of them that you see is called หมอนทอง (lit. Golden pillow) which the texture are harder than others. For another varieties since we have many of them is waiting for you to try. Other issue that surprising me is people in Yaowarat is good in mandarin. I thought they speak only in teochew accent. As the final issue, some thai-chinese family is still conservative on the traditional, but in my fam, they're not. I had requested my mom taught me for a long time, but she didn't want me to know what did she gossip to me. It's quite funny story.
@maxdc988 Жыл бұрын
Not bias but individual preference. She prefers creamy texture. 😂
Oh.... No wonder! She's a Malay. Dos she know that Thai people criticize Malaysians for eating durian that is so ripe it's almost rotten? Oops! The tastes of each nation. She doesn't like my durian, I don't like your durian!
@Lalabella_96 Жыл бұрын
@@ACCANIX you right a rotten durian because a creamy texture and small really bad😂
@สมหญิงรักเล่น Жыл бұрын
@@maxdc988If it's her individual preference then she shouldn't say don't eat Thai durian.
@fuzagi Жыл бұрын
Know eat, know eat! Nai Ek pork leg rice is very close to the ancient recipe
I am Thai of Chinese descent 3rd generation 100% Chinese blood but I identify myself as Thai 100% my last name is Thai and I can speak Thai and English, but not Chinese. My grandma and parents can speak Chinese but I can’t.
@drowswolley4661 Жыл бұрын
GG的中文进步了很大👍
@chinmungkuan8551 Жыл бұрын
Lovely and cute couple 😊
@sallyleung4154 Жыл бұрын
So lovely❤ 我老公出國都講中文,如果對方不懂,他才講英文。😂估計他想把中文發揚光大
@zouzouhaozi2267 Жыл бұрын
中文 是指 广东话吗??在东南亚国家
@gun_show2802 ай бұрын
呢啲咪叫失禮囉
@hanshengwen636 Жыл бұрын
Georgia中文說得好好
@NickyDIY101 Жыл бұрын
Yaowarat = Old China town, immigrant 70years+ ago, not so many Chinese registered citizen still be alived. MRT Huaykwang = New China town (place of Chinese citizen staying and running business in Thailand)
@lkp3335 Жыл бұрын
Thai people eats durian when it still little crunchy, not too ripe, not too strong in flavor while Malaysians eat it at the ripest/ creamy and strongest flavor. If you prefer creamy mushy durian in Thai you can ask the seller for ripest one
@kevinp8108 Жыл бұрын
At 02:15...FYI, those are telecommunication lines that look messy, not electrical lines. Please do your research before scaring anyone wanting to visit Thailand!
@PranadonNakaseths Жыл бұрын
Ngl most of her point feel like they're intentional, It's feel like she want people to attack her and then she can labeled them as toxic and insecure people
@MingkamonNgamjai Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure where you got your “not cremy, just like bite into an apple, kind of durian” but I can tell you now that Thai durian is one of the best when it ripe, if your durian is not creamy and soft , then you didn’t broght the ripe one.
@jackchen60098 ай бұрын
Thai durian cheap n tasty. I love
@lofiben Жыл бұрын
There are a lot of Chinese people in Thailand, including my family. Yes, the Thai government forced assimilation upon the Chinese, but it did so to other ethnic groups to create a national unified identity under Thaification policies. Whether you agree with it or not, it's already happened. Given the choice of going back to China and starving or becoming Thai in order to stay in Thailand, my family at least choose the latter. I can't speak for all Thai Chinese families, but we do acknowledge our Chinese background, often using the Teochew version of family terms like aunt, uncle, etc. rather than the Thai versions, we also do Cheng Meng, Chinese style funeral rites and rituals, etc although we identify as Thai first and foremost.
@nemoatlantis7148 Жыл бұрын
no, do eat durian in Thailand, you should try it. if it's your preference, so be it. but to state it like that, it's kinda self center-ish.
@palmtide Жыл бұрын
去过曼谷唐人街,振奋人心。
@LeonWagg Жыл бұрын
Most Thais have some Chinese ancestry. In fact, “Tai peoples,” or people who speak Tai-Kadai languages (Laos, Thais, etc.), all originated from Southern China.
@ginse4891 Жыл бұрын
but tai people are not chinese. we just come from the areas in south china but we're NOT han chinese
@khokhacui5729 Жыл бұрын
@@ginse4891 you dont need to explan. chinese Uyghur or chinese Mongolian and so on are also Chinese. like chinese Thai is Thai, but they are still chinese with Thai Nationality
@ginse4891 Жыл бұрын
@@khokhacui5729 i was talking about "tai people" which are Thai even though they originated from southern china. didn't talked about "chinese" thai
@khokhacui5729 Жыл бұрын
@@ginse4891 I know what you mean, what i want to say is: What I am saying is, if a person is born in Thailand and has Thai nationality, but his father is Chinese, no matter what nationality he is, he should be Chinese with Thai blood and Thai nationality
@ginse4891 Жыл бұрын
@@khokhacui5729 seriously no one in thailand cares about that. we don't regard ourselves as chinese and no one can change our mind.
@alicey8353 Жыл бұрын
Hi GG, would you mind introducing your eyeshadow brand? The colors look nice (probably because on you haha! Thank you!
@behchen4290 Жыл бұрын
好!
@tawatchaiw1 Жыл бұрын
you can have creamy durian just tell the seller what the spec you want.
@peterchew3823 Жыл бұрын
GG在这一集视频讲了好多的普通话,他的普通话还说的蛮不错。
@brianliew5901 Жыл бұрын
There're about 3 million people of Chinese descent in Bangkok.
@Doraremi666 Жыл бұрын
唐人街豬腳飯!米其林推荐的!!!
@RangKlos Жыл бұрын
No you can't go to the last shop without trying their flat noodle Noooooooo Lol I like the interviews so much. You two are the best.