Ever tried to help someone only to be told off by that ingrate of a person?

Well, one guy in Singapore was on the receiving end of some impoliteness, despite taking some time out to help a Mandarin-speaking tourist.

But the Singaporean got the last laugh, apparently.

Asked for directions

Tourists asking for directions in Singapore are common enough, given how Singapore received a record number of tourist arrivals in 2018.

Did not know Bayfront station's Chinese name

The Singaporean, Timothy Bon, recounted his story in a very succinct tweet:

y’all so this china lady at the train station asked me for directions to “海湾舫” & i didn’t know if she meant bayfront, harbourfront or admiralty.

so while trying to clarify it w her, she snapped at me and said “华人不会讲话语，你好意思吗?”



i sent her bitchass towards tuas link — beldrea shanel tan jia hui 💕💖 (@Timothy_Bon) March 12, 2019

In case you can't see it:

What tourist said

Bon tweeted that the Chinese tourist he met at a train station asked for directions to 海湾舫 (hǎi wān fǎng), which is Bayfront.

But he was not sure if that location meant Bayfront, HarbourFront or Admiralty, and he tried to clarify it with her.

However, according to Bon, the tourist snapped at him and said: "华人不会讲话语，你好意思吗?"

Her reply roughly translates to: "Chinese but don't know how to speak Mandarin, aren't you ashamed of yourself?"

Comeuppance

Bon then decided to send the tourist in the direction of Tuas Link instead, which is at the extreme west end of the island.

The hilarity of the situation was not lost on other Twitter users.

The tweet received more than 1,900 likes and was retweeted 2,600 times in less than a day.

Tried to help but was taking too long

Bon provided more details in subsequent replies to his original tweet.

He said that he was "genuinely trying to help", but the woman "got mad because [he] took too long".

Proof that he was not proficient in Chinese at all

In addition, he subsequently realised that he keyed in the wrong Chinese character in his tweet, and this was as good as any proof that he is not lying when he said he got a C6 for the subject in the past.

Bon also revealed that he has dyslexia, a common learning disorder that makes the learning of languages tough.

But even so, he is proud of himself for getting a C6 for his Chinese, because he managed to pass the subject.

And he probably should be proud he can even point the Mandarin-speaking tourist to Tuas Link at all.

For those of you still wondering what the station names of Marina Bay, HarbourFront, Admiralty, etc are in Chinese:

Marina Bay - 滨海湾

Bayfront - 海湾舫

HarbourFront - 港湾

Admiralty - 海军部

Marina South Pier - 滨海南码头

Top image via Timothy Bon Twitter