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狄雨霏 , 中国人:再多一些拥抱. 纽约时报中文网, May 19, 2014 (available now) cn.nytimes.com/china/20140519/c19hugs/
 
 , which is translated from
 Didi Kirsten Tatlow, Cautious Chinese Gain Comfort With Hugs. New York Times, May 7, 2014
 (“My mother-in-law [is Irish. T]he Irish, like the English, aren’t really known for overt displays of physical affection”)
 
 My comment:
 (a) “In hugging between Chinese and non-Chinese, it was non-Chinese who once foisted physical affection on the Chinese.”
 (i) cn.nytimes.com’s translation: “以往中国人和外国人之间的拥抱都是外国人强加给中国人的。”
 (ii) Wrong: not 强加, but the opposite.
 (iii) foist (vt): “to introduce or insert surreptitiously”
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/foist
 
 (b) The “lock arms” is translated as “跨胳膊.” There was no such term in Taiwan (while I was there); indeed we did not know what 胳膊 exactly was. I thought 光着胳膊 referred to shoulders.
 
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