Chinese Character Writing For Dummies
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Chinese Character Writing For Dummies

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eBook - ePub

Chinese Character Writing For Dummies

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About This Book

Learn to write 100 characters in Chinese

Billions of people worldwide speak Chineseā€”and now you can learn to write 100 characters in the world's most-spoken language! Whether you're taking a course, looking to get ahead at work, or just want to up the ante when you're communicating with Chinese-speaking family and friends, Chinese Character Writing For Dummies gets you up to speed fast.

This workbook will guide your first steps in learning Chinese characters. It contains 100 basic characters, including 44 simple characters (pictograms and symbols) and 56 composite characters (ideograms and ideo-phonograms). It helps you little by little to familiarize yourself with the pieces of the puzzle most frequently used, as well as some basic Chinese writing rules.

  • Offers online bonus content that includes instructional videos, downloadable flashcards, and printable writing pages
  • Shows you how to write 100 Chinese characters
  • Provides instruction for beginners, students, and lifelong learners
  • Gives you helpful tips on how to memorize characters

Speaking Chinese will take you farā€”and learning to write some of the most common characters will only take you farther! Find out how Chinese Character Writing For Dummies can help you today!

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Yes, you can access Chinese Character Writing For Dummies by Wendy Abraham,Jing Li in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Languages. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
For Dummies
Year
2019
ISBN
9781119475552
Edition
1
Chapter 1

Wrapping Your Mind around the Chinese Writing System

IN THIS CHAPTER
Bullet
Grasping the complexity of written Chinese
Bullet
Understanding the difference between traditional and simplified characters
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Getting excited and developing some strategies to help you learn to write in Chinese
The Chinese writing system is many things, but easy isnā€™t one of them. Itā€™s unique, itā€™s beautiful, and itā€™s remarkable in its complexity. But just how does anyone attack a written language that doesnā€™t even have an alphabet? And how do you know which way to write it or read it, if the characters can go from left to right, right to left, or up and down?
In this chapter, I give the lowdown on these age-old questions and more. I also give you tips on how to write and how to memorize at least the first 100 characters out of a language that has thousands of them.

Appreciating the Complexities of Written Chinese

Chinese has the distinction of being the mother tongue of the oldest continuous civilization on earth as well as the language spoken by the greatest number of people. It is also has arguably one of the most intricate written languages in the world, with about 50,000 characters in a typical Chinese dictionary ā€” 28,000 of which are already obsolete.
So why keep obsolete words in a Chinese dictionary, you ask? Same reason we keep them in English dictionaries. They may no longer be used regularly, if at all, but they do still exist. Havenā€™t you ever felt crapulous? What? Youā€™ve never been stuffed to the gills? Back in the 16th century, that Late Latin word meant just that. While we donā€™t use that word anymore, it can still be found in any dictionary worth its salt. Those are the kinds of words youā€™ll find in Chinese dictionaries too. This character, lƬ ꠗ (pronounced ā€œleeā€) variously meant chestnut, trembling, or afraid. That character with those original meanings is now obsolete, but one more stroke was added to the basic character, and the resulting character 傈 took over with a new meaning: ancestral tablet ā€” a stone slab or piece of wood used by Chinese people to revere their ancestors.
To read a Chinese newspaper with relative ease, you only need to know about 3,000 to 4,000 characters. A well-educated person will be able to read between 4,000 and 6,000 characters and 40,000 to 60,000 words, each of which is comprised of one, two, or three characters. Armed with only 500 characters, you can recognize 75 percent of all Chinese words. And if you know 1,000 characters, youā€™ll be able to read almost 90 percent of a newspaper.
Traditionally, only the wealthiest could afford the time and money to have their sons tutored in a written language so complex that it necessitated years of study to master. China has been a subsistence level society for centuries, and hunger and famine were real things not to be taken for granted. As a result, few people were literate in ancient China.
While Chinese characters are beautiful and filled with meaning in just one glance, with the sheer number of characters needed for even a rudimentary level of literacy, many could only see its impracticality and predicted its replacement by the more efficient alphabet. Thus began the creation of Pinyin (a form of transliteration which used Latin letters to reflect the pronunciation of Chinese words, such as our own in English), and the march toward language reform.

How the Written Word Unifies China

For thousands of years, spoken Chinese has been subdivided into hundreds of regional dialects, most of them mutually incomprehensible. Throughout the centuries, dynasty after dynasty, kingdom after kingdom, the one thing that united the Chinese people was the written word.
Even today, if two Chinese people are sitting next to each other on a train and one is from Beijing and speaks Mandarin, while the other is from the south and speaks Cantonese, and they read a newspaper out loud to each other they would have absolutely no idea what the other one is saying. However, if they look at the same characters and read silently next to each other, they will both understand the same thing. It is easier for them to write to each other than carry on an actual conversation.
In fact, spoken Chinese, with its many tones, leaves the door open for ever greater possibilities of meanings with any given word, including words that are not only pronounced the same but also spoken with the same tone. It is only by looking at the written word that the intended meaning and word become clear, if context alone is not enough.
Remember
Chinese people donā€™t only speak one of the two dialects we typically associate with the spoken language: Mandarin and Cantonese. Hundreds of spoken dialects exist, representing every province, city, or town throughout the country, but Mandarin is the official dialect taught in all schools.
technicalstuff
This unification of the country through the written word came about during the Qin (pronounced ā€œchinā€) dynasty. It was during this dynasty that the tyrannical emperor Shi Huangdi had the famous terra cotta warriors made to accompany and protect him in the afterlife. He standardized many things during his short reign to further solidify his rule, foremost among them being the Chinese writing system. If he announced a new edict, everyone could read it.

What? No Alphabet?

Most of the worldā€™s languages are written alphabetically, with each letter representing only a sound, rather than containing any meaning. Chinese writing is logographic, however, so each character represents an entire a word or part of a compound word, necessitating thousands of characters. The word diĆ nnĒŽo ē”µč„‘ (dyan now), for example, is composed of diĆ n, meaning electric, and nĒŽo, meaning brain. Put them together, and you have electronic brain, otherwise known as a computer. While this is fascinating and brilliant, the unabashed truth is that since thereā€™s no alphabet in Chinese, the only way to learn characters is the good old-fashioned way: study, study, study. Roll up your sleeves, put in the time, and memorize each and every one of them.
While learning Chinese characters sometimes feels like an insurmountable task, if you follow this book step-by-step and get to know the radicals and other components that comprise the characters, your study of Chinese will become much, much easier in no time.

Which Way Did They Go? The Direction of Characters

Since each character in Chinese is in and of itself a word, or a part of a compound word (two characters that make ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Introduction
  4. Chapter 1: Wrapping Your Mind around the Chinese Writing System
  5. Chapter 2: Understanding the Structure of Chinese Characters
  6. Chapter 3: Preparing to Write Beautifully
  7. Chapter 4: 100 Chinese Characters
  8. Appendix A: The 214 Chinese Radicals
  9. Appendix B: Compound Words to Practice
  10. Appendix C: Sentences to Practice
  11. Appendix D: Blank Grids for Extra Practice
  12. About the Author
  13. Connect with Dummies
  14. End User License Agreement