In the tenth episode of the new season, the boys from the families of high-ranking officials who deal with the U.S. defense treaty and the affairs of the Middle East and South America scolded in Mandarin: "A pile of meat from a fool." . . Writers, you must be shameless when you study in depth. . .
This season, there are a lot of things to use Chinese points to spread the stalks. BONES also said a Chinese language before, but I forgot to say something.
The ninth episode of the new season.
Bones said she was going to examine a 40,000-year-old skeleton found in a cave in Wuhan. Although the final plot has nothing to do with Wuhan, China or Shanghai, I was pleasantly surprised. It was the first time I heard someone mention Wuhan in an American drama, and it was very interesting.
Episode ten.
The screenwriter's knowledge of Wuhan has made me feel very good, because one-sided understanding of China is already an epidemic.
In the tenth episode, the boy from the family of high-ranking officials dealing with the U.S. defense treaty and the affairs of the Middle East and South America asked in non-standard Mandarin: "Why do they ask this question?" The girl also replied in Mandarin: "I don't know."
Then the boy said: "My father can't say that the Chinese will dominate the earth in ten years, and it will be very useful to learn Mandarin."
Of course, he also scolded in Mandarin: "A pile of meat from a fool."
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