How to pronounce 後門 in Cantonese (12 out of 12):

Previous Example Example 12 of 12
「六四」後老布殊政府多次為中國開咗後門
The Bush administration has repeatedly opened its doors to China.

Cantonese Sentence Breakdown

六四 luk6 sei3
Six Four
hau6
back
behind
rear
afterwards
after
later
descendants
then
a surname
future
after next
succeeding
lou5
prefix used before the surname of a person or a numeral indicating the order of birth of the children in a family or to indicate affection or familiarity
old (of people)
venerable (person)
experienced
of long standing
always
all the time
of the past
very
outdated
(of meat etc) tough
old age
abbreviation for Laotse, the founder of Taoism
a surname
to retire from official service
to become old
to honor the aged
shameless, thick-skinned
familiar term of respect for elderly people
decrepit
hardened
steady
trustworthy
dark
deep (colour)
youngest (in Beijing dialect)
parents
布殊 bou3 syu4
Cantonese translation of George H.W. Bush, the 41st president of United States of America, or George W. Bush, the 43rd, shortened to just "Bush"
政府 zing3 fu2
government
多次 do1 chi3
many times
wai6
because of
for
on account of
on behalf of
by (in the passive voice)
中國 zung1 gwok3
China
hoi1
to open
to start
to turn on
to boil
to write out (a prescription, check, invoice etc)
to operate (a vehicle)
carat (gold)
abbr. for Kelvin, 开尔文Kāi'ěrwén [开尔文]
abbr. for 开本kāiběn [开本], book format
to set up
to run
to leave
to hold (meeting
exhibition)
away
apart
aside
verb particle marking habitual aspect
zo2
Cantonese particle equivalent to 了le [了] or 过guò [过], a particle used to indicate perfective aspect for continuous state
completed actions
past events
change of situation
後門 hau6 mun4
back door
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