Has testing negative or positive for Covid become a matter of 'good' versus 'evil'?
Chinese netizens are so focused on the Russian attack on Ukraine that nobody can focus on work (wuxin gongzuo).
PREMIUM CONTENT ARTICLE Over the past seven weeks, the whereabouts and safety of Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai have been a matter of constant concern in...
Weibo users can clean up their usernames before December 8.
Nèijuǎn (involution) has become a commonly used term on Chinese social media, but what is it?
Some of the buzzwords that were most noteworthy in Chinese media this year.
Weibo users discuss how a professor at the University of Southern California was temporarily suspended for using Chinese filler word 'nage.'
Using "Grandma's Legs" (nǎinai de tuǐ) was apparently enough to detain him.
From blockchain to hardcore, this is an overview of China's media top buzzwords over the past year.
What are Chinese podcast app users listening to? An overview.
Why does 'Trump' have multiple names in Chinese?
Bulgari's wordplay is multidimensional, but did it consider Jewish people?
If there is one single word for being 'dirt-poor' and 'ugly' it would be 'qiou' - a character many self-mocking young Chinese say they identify with.
Online slang has been an important part of Chinese online culture ever since the first message boards were launched, and is ubiquitous and ever-changing on popular...
When the editor-in-chief of state tabloid Global Times gave Jia Zhangke’s latest film a bad review on Weibo, the renowned director responded with a bad review...
How a Chinese boyband triggered social media discussions on what it means to be ‘masculine’.
Some workers at Fast Dog would've rather seen a cat in their company's remarkable rebranding campaign.
'Laolao' or 'waipo'? A Shanghai textbook decides that only one of them is right for granny.
The term 'netizens', referring to Chinese internet users, is both loved and hated.
100 "must-know" terms for the 19th National Congress, propagated by People's Daily.