How to pronounce 走過 in Cantonese (7 out of 48):

Previous Example Example 7 of 48 Next Example
由地鐵站走過來還要兜一個大圈才能走到
It takes a long circle to get to the metro station.

Cantonese Sentence Breakdown

jau4
to follow
from
it is for...to
reason
cause
because of
due to
to
to leave it (to sb)
by (introduces passive verb)
up to
through
a surname
地鐵站 dei6 tit3 zaam6
subway station
走過 zau2 gwo3
walk past
loi6
to greet and welcome guests
waan4
still
still in progress
still more
yet
even more
in addition
fairly
passably (good)
as early as
even
also
else
besides
to return (to a place)
to give back
to repay
to return something
again
to revert to the original state
jiu3
important
vital
to want
to ask for
will
going to (as future auxiliary)
may
must
(used in a comparison) must be
probably
if
essential points
necessary
necessity
to desire
to need
should
dau1
pocket
bag
to wrap up or hold in a bag
to move in a circle
to canvas or solicit
to take responsibility for
to disclose in detail
combat armor (old)
pouch
to take a detour
to go for a leisurely jaunt
to scout around (for customers)
to try and revert
change what one had said in a conversation
to take all the responsibility for something
a container (for rice
pet food
coin)
direct at
a covering for head
a mountain chair
to dig up
to hitch up
一個 jat1 go3
a; one
大圈 daai6 hyun1
Guangzhou; gangsters from southern China who goes to Hong Kong or Macau to commit crimes [colloquial]
才能 coi4 nang4
(conjunction) So that (someone) can
zau2
to walk
to go
to run
to move (of vehicle)
to visit
to leave
to go away
to die (euph.)
from
through
away (in compound verbs, such as 撤走chèzǒu [撤走])
to change (shape, form, meaning)
to escape
to run away
to make a trip
to leak out
to incur loss
one's humble self
dou3
to (a place)
until (a time)
up to
to go
to arrive
(verb complement denoting completion or result of an action)
been to
a particle used after a verb or adjective to indicate degree
extent
Previous Example Example 7 of 48 Next Example