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“TG”的版本间的差异

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'''土共 (Tǔgòng): TG (Earthy Communists)'''
  
TG are the initials for 土共 (tǔgòng), another name for the Communist Party of China.
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The Chinese Communist Party. The first character, 土 tǔ, can be a noun meaning "earth" or "soil," or an adjective meaning "earthy," "unrefined," or "uncouth."
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There is some disagreement about the origin of this term. Some say that TG derives from "Earthy Eighth Route" (土八路 Tǔ Bālù), a [http://zhidao.baidu.com/question/87904422 nickname for the Chinese communist military brigade during World War II] known as the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eighth_Route_Army Eighth Route Army]. Others believe TG was [http://www.ftchinese.com/story/001023779 coined by Chiang Kai-shek] to refer to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) after he and the Nationalists fled to Taiwan. Still others say the term was [http://city.udn.com/64086/3780659 invented in Hong Kong] in the 1990s to disparagingly refer to the CCP.
  
The term is made of two characters, 土 meaning, “land; dirt; base; unrefined; or local” and 共 meaning “public or common.” (The character 共 is also in the Chinese word for Communism, 共产主义.) There is some disagreement about the origin of the term. [http://zhidao.baidu.com/question/87904422 Some say] that the term comes from 土八路 which is a nickname for 八路军, the Eight Route Army. The Eighth Route Army was the larger of the two major Chinese communist forces which fought the Japanese from 1937 to 1945. [http://www.ftchinese.com/story/001023779 Others say] that the term was created by Chiang Kai-shek to refer to the Party after he fled to Taiwan. [http://city.udn.com/64086/3780659?tpno=30&cate_no=0 Still others say] the term was invented in the 90s by people living in Hong Kong to sarcastically refer to the party. Because the term means different things to different people, one has to pay attention to context to determine if it is used sarcastically or positively. When used sarcastically, netizens point out that TG are also the initials for 贪官 (tānguān) meaning “corrupt official.”
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The letters "TG" may also stand for "[[Celestial Empire|celestial country]]" (天国 tiānguó), "corrupt official" (贪官 tānguān), or the English word "transgender."
 
 
TG can also stand for 天国 (tiānguó) which means the same thing as [[Celestial Empire]].
 
 
 
TG, in Chinese slang can also refer to the English word “transgender.
 
 
 
[[File:Eight_Route_Army_in_Shanxi.jpg|800px|thumb|left|Eighth Route Army in Shanxi]]
 
  
 
[[Category: Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon]]
 
[[Category: Grass-Mud Horse Lexicon]]

2015年5月22日 (五) 15:32的版本

土共 (Tǔgòng): TG (Earthy Communists)

The Chinese Communist Party. The first character, 土 tǔ, can be a noun meaning "earth" or "soil," or an adjective meaning "earthy," "unrefined," or "uncouth."

There is some disagreement about the origin of this term. Some say that TG derives from "Earthy Eighth Route" (土八路 Tǔ Bālù), a nickname for the Chinese communist military brigade during World War II known as the Eighth Route Army. Others believe TG was coined by Chiang Kai-shek to refer to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) after he and the Nationalists fled to Taiwan. Still others say the term was invented in Hong Kong in the 1990s to disparagingly refer to the CCP.

The letters "TG" may also stand for "celestial country" (天国 tiānguó), "corrupt official" (贪官 tānguān), or the English word "transgender."