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  2. What Happens to Your Body if You Eat Clementines Every Day ...

    www.aol.com/happens-body-eat-clementines-every...

    Experts agree that eating about two to three clementines per day, depending on their size, is pretty darn good for you. "Eating clementines every day is fine," Haar says.

  3. Mandarin Chinese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_Chinese

    People in many Mandarin-speaking areas may use different initial sounds where Beijing uses initial r-/ɻ/. Common variants include /j/, /l/, /n/ and /w/. [96] Some dialects have initial /ŋ/ corresponding to the zero initial of the standard language. [96] This initial is the result of a merger of the Middle Chinese zero initial with /ŋ/ and /ʔ/.

  4. Mandarin orange varieties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_orange_varieties

    [9] [16] sometimes known as a "Thanksgiving Orange" or "Christmas orange", as its peak season is winter; an important commercial mandarin orange form, having displaced mikans in many markets. Clemenules or Nules , a variety of Clementine named for the Valencian town where it was first bred in 1953; it is the most popular variety of Clementine ...

  5. What’s So Special About Mandarin Oranges During Lunar ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/special-mandarin-oranges-during...

    Today, the mandarin remains a popular fruit, so much so that people will shell out huge sums for the highest quality they can find. (In 2020, a crate of satsuma mandarin oranges in Japan was ...

  6. East Asian age reckoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_age_reckoning

    By modern reckoning, the child would be 11 years old at the beginning of the year and turn 12 years old in June. Therefore, the modern way of reckoning age does not correspond to the horoscope. Using the traditional reckoning, the child in the example is 13 sui for the entirety of the fan tai sui year. [5]

  7. Taiwanese Mandarin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwanese_Mandarin

    A 2004 study found that Mandarin was spoken more fluently by Hakka and Taiwanese aboriginals than their respective mother tongues; Hoklo groups, on average, spoke better Hokkien, but Hoklo under 50 years old still spoke significantly better Mandarin (with comparable levels of fluency to their usage of Hokkien) than the elderly.

  8. Shanghainese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghainese

    A survey of students from the primary school in 2010 indicated that 52.3% of students believed Mandarin is easier than Shanghainese for communication, and 47.6% of the students choose to speak Mandarin because it is a mandatory language at school.

  9. Yue Lao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yue_Lao

    The old man answered: "I am reading a book of marriage listing for who is going to marry whom. In my pack are red cords for tying the feet of husband and wife." [ 5 ] When Wei Gu and the old man came together to a marketplace, they saw a blind old woman carrying a three-year-old little girl in her arms.