1. Civilized language is deeply rooted in the hearts of men, women, old and young, and Mandarin integrates the feelings of east, west, north and south. ——Wen Mei's "The Origin of Modern Chinese"
2. The hearts are in harmony, the languages ??are connected, and the two are living happily together. ——Huakang "CCTV13 News Channel"
3. The beauty of language is also a kind of beauty, and Mandarin can better reflect the beauty of language. ——Dong Qing's "Happy China Tour"
4. Speak Mandarin and travel around the world. ——Han Hepo's "Meet on Saturday"
5. Speak Mandarin to welcome guests from all over the world; use civilized language to express true feelings. ——Zhu Xun's "Our Generation"
6. To carry forward the national style, start from speaking Chinese; to speak Chinese, start from Mandarin. ——Hai Xia's "Xinwen Lianbo"
Extended information:
About the origin of Chinese Mandarin
1. Nanjing was the capital in the early Ming Dynasty, and Nanjing Mandarin was respected. Nanjing Mandarin is the official language, and Jinling Yayin (with "Hongwu Zhengyun" as the standard) has been established as the standard pronunciation of Chinese Chinese as the orthodox direct descendant of the ancient Central Plains Yayan.
2. In 1909 AD, the Qing government established the "Guoyu Editing and Review Committee" and officially named the Mandarin in common use at that time as Guoyu. This is the first time that Chinese has been officially named during the Qing Dynasty.
3. In May 1932, the Ministry of Education of the Republic of China officially announced and published the "Vocabulary of Commonly Used Chinese Pronunciation", which provided a model for establishing the standards of the Chinese language and the first system of modern Chinese standards - the Guoyu System. . Mandarin broadcasts after 1932 all adopted the standard form of "Commonly Used Chinese Vocabulary", and the standards of Mandarin in various places were unified.
4. In 1953, the Central People's Government selected Luanping County, Chengde City, Jehol Province, one of the four eastern provinces, as the main collection place for the standard pronunciation of Mandarin. In 1955, it was determined that the name of modern standard Chinese would be changed from Guoyu to Mandarin. , was written into the Constitution as the national common language. After the standards were formulated, the State Council issued the "Instructions on Promoting Mandarin" on February 6, 1956, to promote it nationwide.
5. Article 19 of the "Constitution of the People's Republic of China" stipulates: "The state promotes Mandarin that is commonly used throughout the country." Modern Standard Chinese is the national common language of the People's Republic of China. Due to political reasons, the names of mainland China and Taiwan are different but have the same connotation. They are both modern standard Chinese.
Baidu Encyclopedia - Mandarin