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Language Gallery by Sharon Hahn Darlin


Feb 4, 2010

招牌 signboard

 


招 (beckon) 牌 (placard)

by Sharon Hahn Darlin


This photo caught my eye while I was searching for Chinese signboards. A scene so saturated with interesting cultural cues, I still can't stop staring at it.  

The strange allure of this small dilapidated structure captured in a sun-filled setting... Corrugated metal sheets, wood, glass, cement, plastic, bricks. Mostly broken, torn, patched. Is this someone's shack? A restaurant? A lovely Korean girl in hanbok (turns out she is a well-known South Korean actress, but a long way away from here in Yanbian) beckons (?) you from a large colorful signboard. She seems to be carrying... or rather, cuts of meat and poultry seem to be stuck to her bosom. The sign reads "Master Liu's Deli" in Chinese (
"刘傅熟食店") and "Master Liu's Inn" in -North- Korean (류사부숙식점). Yes, deli, meaning it's an establishment serving cooked meals. Oh really. 숙식점 in Korean is ambiguous, but can suggest room and board. Oh REALLY. Hmm. Okay. So... which is it anyway? Telephone - TELEPHONE!- (电话) 13944331422, Yanbian, China (near Vladivostok and North Korean border.) Shall we call to find out? 

(Liu) 傅 (master) 熟食店 (deli) 류 (Liu) 사부 (master) 숙식(熟食店/宿食, deli/inn)
 

p.s. Do I see 麻 (hemp) written on the window with an unintentional check mark? Fascinating indeed.

photo by
심학철

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