Chinese Language Learning Program
Lesson 80 – How to say our body parts in Chinese?
Hello, everyone. Welcome back. This is Baixue’s Chinese
Language Learning Program. Last time we talked about some Chinese signs and
Meanings. Today, we will talke about how to say our body parts in Chinese.
tóu shǒu liǎn
头 (head); 手 (hand); 脸 (face);
tuǐ gē bo ěr
duo
腿 (leg); 胳 臂 (arm); 耳 朵 (ear);
yǎn jing bō zi bí
zi
眼 睛 (eye);
脖 子 (neck); 鼻子 (nose);
yá chǐ zuǐ ba tóu fa
牙 齿 (tooth); 嘴 巴 (mouth); 头 发 (hair);
jiǎo
shé tou yān hóu
脚 (foot) 舌 头 (tongue); 咽 喉 (throat);
xī gài jiān bǎng shǒu zhǐ
膝 盖 (knee) 肩 膀 (shoulder) 手 指 (finger)
jiǎo zhǐ
jiǎo huái shǒu wàn
脚 趾 (toe) 脚 踝 (ankle) 手 腕 (wrist)
quán tóu zhǐ
jiǎ dà mǔ zhǐ
拳 头 (fist) 指 甲 (nail) 大 拇 指 (thumb)
shí zhǐ zhōng zhǐ
食 指 (forefinger) 中 指 (middle finger)
wú míng zhǐ xiǎo mu zhǐ
无 名 指 (ring finger) 小 拇 指 (little finger)
xīn zàng
wèi shèn zàng
心 脏 (heart) 胃 (stomach) 肾 脏 (kidney)
gān zàng
yí xiàn fèi
肝 脏 (liver) 胰 腺 (pancreas) 肺 (lung)
Today’s idiom is:
wǔ zàng liù fǔ
五 脏 六 腑
(Literally mean: internal organs of the body (heart,
spleen, liver, lungs and kidneys). It can be used to refer to the human heart;
may also be used to describe the internal situation of things.)
wǒ fā zì wǔ zàng liù fǔ de ài tā.
我 发自 五 脏 六 腑 地爱 她.
(I love her from my very entrails.)
fó luó lǐ dá fǎng fú lián wǔ zàng liù fǔ dōu zài zhàn lì.
佛 罗 里 达 仿 佛 连 五 脏 六 腑 都 在 颤 栗。
(Florida was trembling to its very depths.)
má què suī xiǎo, wǔ zàng jù quán
麻 雀 虽 小, 五 脏 俱 全
(literally translates as “the sparrow may be tiny, but it
has a complete set of inner organs.” – means that something small has all the
properties that of something bigger.)
Ok, that is all for today.
xiè xiè!
谢 谢 ! (Thanks!)
xià cì jiàn
下 次 见! (See you next time!)
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