Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Cantonese is spoken by the children and grandchildren of Cantonese and Hong Kong people in London, England.

Cantonese is spoken by the children and grandchildren of Cantonese and Hong Kong people in London, England.

When I went to London for an internship, the interviewer asked me first: Can you speak Cantonese? The interviewer looked at me with the boss's eyes open until I said yes. There are many Cantonese people in the older generation in London, and so do Hong Kong people. Although they have lived in Britain for so many years, their children and grandchildren can actually speak fluent Cantonese. They say that speaking Cantonese in London always takes advantage. Most Cantonese and Hong Kong people live near London's Chinatown. The restaurants and supermarkets in London's Chinatown are run by Cantonese speakers, so they are all Cantonese-style: light dishes, busy staff, floors dragged by aunts. When you walk into these restaurants, you will think that you have returned to China in an instant. These immigrants have worked hard in London for decades, but the layout of the shops is still the same, red and green, and there are shops in Guangong Town. There are no fancy flowers, are there? Ghost five horses six? Something fashionable.

When I first arrived in London, I didn't know that Cantonese speakers robbed a lot. I remember once doing a street interview with an old man in China. When I caught one, I asked questions in Mandarin. How long have you been in England? People told me directly in Cantonese:? Beauty, do you know how to speak Cantonese? I shook my head. He said stiffly that he couldn't speak Mandarin and walked away. Finally, I can only ask questions in Cantonese, and the old people are laughing and asking me questions.

Later, I became familiar with London and ran several political-related activities (such as the activities of the House of Commons and the TDC), and found that most of the participants spoke fluent Cantonese. Participants just want to improve the social status of Chinese in Britain or fight for their due rights and interests. They hope to gently change their social environment, even a little bit is enough.

There are many Cantonese and Hong Kong people who come into contact with London. Do you find many of them? In Cao Cao, in Han? Our tastes and living habits remain unchanged. Cantonese speakers or Cantonese speakers, Chinese eaters or Chinese eaters. Even if you get a green card and hear others say that the motherland is wrong, you will still take it lightly, or you will go to correct it. Asked why they didn't go back to China, they said, it's been decades. Go back and see that it's getting better and better, and you'll regret it when you come out. If you don't see well, you will inevitably feel depressed. It is better to leave a thought and a hope. ?