Saturday, June 14, 2008

Characters are objectively harder, even for Chinese

dmoser -
In my experience, native Chinese speakers are simply not able to write their native language with the same ease as users of alphabetic scripts, a problem which is directly attributable to the lack of any regular sound-to-symbol organizing principle in the Chinese script. The following is an excerpt from an article I wrote called "The Invisible Writing on the Wall", and another excerpt from "Why Chinese is So Damn Hard":

For it wasn’t just a problem of the “uneducated masses”. As the months went by, I began to discover that everyone, even the most highly educated and bookish, seemed to have trouble remembering the characters for common words. I began to keep a little notebook of examples of the ti bi wang zi(提笔忘字) phenomenon, and I was amazed at the kind of lapses I encountered—characters in very mundane words like “paint”, “tin can”, “spine”, “mouse” and so on—all temporarily forgotten by people who were clearly very intelligent, well-read, and even exceptionally talented at language use. Though I suddenly felt vindicated with regards to my own difficulty remembering how to write Chinese characters, I began to wonder if this problem was more pervasive and pernicious than the Chinese themselves were aware of.
The most astounding example I encountered back in my early days studying Chinese was during a lunch with four graduate students in the Peking University Chinese department. I had a bad cold that day, and wanted to write a note to a friend to cancel a meeting. I found that I couldn’t write the character ti 嚔 in the word for “sneeze”, da penti 打喷嚔, and so I asked my four friends for help. To my amazement, none of the four could successfully retrieve the character ti 嚔. Four Chinese graduate students at China’s most prestigious university could not write the word for “sneeze” in their own native script! One simply cannot imagine a similar situation in a phonetic script environmente.g., four Harvard graduate students unable to write a common word like “sneeze” in the orthography of their native language.


I have occasionally taught English to Beijing schoolchildren, and one day I was helping a class of third graders review English words for body parts. One little boy wrote “knee” on the blackboard, and then, as he attempted to write the Chinese translation xigai 膝盖, found he could not write the characters. I found this rather intriguing, and I begin to quiz the class on common words for body parts and everyday objects, and within a few minutes we came up with a list of words like yaoshi 钥匙 “key”, niaochao 鸟巢 “bird’s nest”, lajiao 辣椒 “hot pepper”, huazhuang 化妆 “makeup”, gebo 胳膊 “arm”, jugong 鞠躬 “bow”, and so on, all of which they could write (or correctly guess) in English, but could not successfully render in Chinese script! Abilities varied greatly, of course, and a couple of the brighter kids could seemingly write almost any character, but for most of them, their written English lexicon had already made a few semantic inroads that were still inaccessible via the Chinese characters. After the class I mentioned this interesting (and to me, distressing) state of affairs to some of the parents who stayed on to chat with me. This gave rise to a lively discussion, during which we found that many of the parents, to their bemused chagrin, also stumbled over characters in common words like saozhou 扫帚 “broom”, gebozhou 胳膊肘 “elbow”, zhouwen 皱纹 “wrinkle”, aizheng 癌症 “cancer”, menkan 门槛 “threshold”, qi 鳍 “fin”, chiru 耻辱 “shame”, xidicao 洗涤槽 “kitchen sink”, Lundun 伦敦 “London”, and so on. Many of these adults held advanced degrees, and one was an editor at a Beijing newspaper. One of the parents sheepishly confided in me “I wince when I my child asks me how to write a character, because I often can’t remember, either. This has happened so often that I’ve totally lost face in this regard, and nowadays the joke in our house is ‘Look it up, you’ll remember it longer.’”
Comparisons of Chinese characters with other writing systems are admittedly fraught with difficulty, and such questions are outside my area of expertise. If there is indeed a disparity here, as I contend, the problem would be an “invisible” one. It is common knowledge that the characters are difficult to learn, but few imagine just how difficult in comparison to alphabetic scripts. One could not expect Chinese parents and teachers to notice a failing that would only be evident through direct and scientific comparisons of Chinese kids’ performance with that of their American counterparts.
Ian_Lee -
Dmoser:

When I drive to work in the morning, there is phone-in quiz in the radio which many Americans cannot spell right some very simple words like "accelerate", "Portuguese", "potential",.....etc.

So I am not surprised that those students and their parents in Beijing cannot write those common characters properly.

But my daughters who attended Sunday Chinese school here for 3 years can write properly words like 伦敦 in its traditional script which is five strokes more.

Anyhow, the top contenders in the Spelling Bee in this state are always Asian kids.
Quest -
Yea, if you can just scribble down the general shape of the character, or substitute in another character with the same sound, you can still be understood. Then you can look it up in the dictionary using pinyin.

I agree it takes more time to search a chinese dictionary if you do not know the sound of the character. However, since you only need to know a few thousand characters instead of the tens of thousands of words for English, a Chinese would likely use the dictionary less frequently than an English speaker.
xuechengfeng -
Your "Why Chinese Is So Damn Hard," article described my plight to a tee, and was hilarious!

I was dumbfounded today, I asked my Chinese instructor if she could draw the traditional character for 里 because I think I messed it up on my writing test, and she couldn't do it! She said she only knew how to write simplified characters.
xuechengfeng -
Ian:

The problem is if one were to be asked to spell the words you mentioned, and couldn't do it correctly, someone would at least be able to recognize their intentions because they can sound it out to where it's recognizable. Some of the same spelling characters are close (ex. ji) but what if you don't know either of them?
skylee -
Quote:
I asked my Chinese instructor if she could draw the traditional character for 里 because I think I messed it up on my writing test, and she couldn't do it! She said she only knew how to write simplified characters.
This is sad. But thanks to word processors you now can easily find the traditional form ->
Quest -
I am sure your teacher could recognize it if she saw it written out. You should not expect people from the mainland to be able to write traditional characters anyways. Nothing so sad about it
beirne -
I'm not sure about Quest's point that a Chinese only needs to know a few thousand characters whereas an English speaker needs to know 10's of thousands of words, therefore a Chinese would need to use the dictionary less. How does one know if they want to use 做 or 作? Or which of the 164 characters pronounced yi4? Knowing how to write Chinese involves not only writing the characters but knowing which ones to combine.
smithsgj -
Are Chinese students, in China or wherever, actually trained in using dictionaries as a matter of course, whether by radical or pinyin search? I find it slightly suspect that -- in my experience -- students use English to Chinese dictionaries frequently, but never seem to look anything up in a Chinese to English dictionary (or for that matter even own one, since the two components, unlike European bilingual dictionaries, are almost always sold separately; which is itself very strange, as if there were groups of users who would need one and not the other). In my own Chinese studies I found myself using both, frequently.

I think OP's is a very interesting post. It presents compelling evidence that the Chinese writing system is problematic.

Ian, your phone in words are difficult words: like "parallel", the kind of words most people have to think twice about. OP was talking about words like "sneeze" and "knee"!
Quest -
so how does not knowing 做 or 作 or the 164? yi's relate to what I said?

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 21st April 2004, 03:42 PM

Replies: 63

Practicing Chinese with Chinese is impossible!!!

Views: 9,598

Posted By chris.

I live in an english speaking country. When i...

I live in an english speaking country. When i speak to my chinese friends in chinese some of them
reply in english and other reply in chinese, if i cant understand their reply in chinese, they
will...

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th May 2007, 04:10 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By kdavid

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

"Does it work?" is a difficult question to answer. I think I better question would be "Can it
really help?" "Is it practical?" etc. I say this because even "the best" tools won't work via
osmosis....

Forum: Speaking and Listening 14th May 2007, 07:36 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By kdavid

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

The site has got a lot of potential, but I feel that recently they've been slow in responding and
reacting to the feedback regarding the new site, and therefore pushing away the very people
they're...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 10th May 2007, 12:56 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By kdavid

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Since ChinesePod's switch to V3 I've been skeptical to resubscribe, but I did it once again hoping
that the changes (for the worse) will be corrected. If they're not corrected by the end of this...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 21st December 2006, 02:44 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By kdavid

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

One more thing I forgot... you can sign up for a free 7-day Premium subscription without having to
use your credit card. You just need to give them your email address.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 21st December 2006, 02:43 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By kdavid

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

This depends on two things: what level you're currently at and what you want to get out of an
online study tool. My first month's subscription is almost out and I will certainly pay for
another...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 9th March 2007, 11:50 AM

Replies: 75

New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (下)

Views: 12,291

Posted By flameproof

Re: New Antiwave Podcast 超级难说6 - 猪年为何不能说猪?

That is very different from Cantonese people, which like fins with no fish.

That type is pretty much the worst type vegetarian you can get. I can't understand the logic
behind it too, if you are a...

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Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 30th August 2007, 11:00 AM

Replies: 16

Which books do Chinese use to learn Classical Chinese?

Views: 1,837

Posted By Mark Yong

Re: Which books do Chinese use to learn Classical Chinese?

The books in my repository are:

Edwin Pulleyblank "Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar"
Michael Fuller "An Introduction to Literary Chinese"
Yuan Naiying, et al "Classical Chinese - A Reader in...

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Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 15th March 2008, 05:55 PM

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Reading my book

Views: 3,754

Posted By imron

回复: Reading my book

Think of measure words as something that describes the noun. So if you imagine a strand of silk
and then imagine wind as fine and delicate as that, and then that would be 一丝风.
没有一丝风 would then be...

Forum: Reading and Writing 7th March 2008, 09:46 AM

Replies: 103

Reading my book

Views: 3,754

Posted By imron

回复: Reading my book

一处幽静的角落
In that sentence, 一处 is the measure word for 角落.

Forum: Reading and Writing 1st March 2008, 11:41 PM

Replies: 103

Reading my book

Views: 3,754

Posted By imron

回复: Reading my book

Not to spoil all the translating fun, but you do know that the copyright for the original English
novel has long since expired and you can find the original novel in many places online?
...

Forum: Reading and Writing 14th February 2008, 08:28 AM

Replies: 103

Reading my book

Views: 3,754

Posted By imron

回复: Reading my book

起来 can refer to any upwards movement, so by itself, it doesn't mean jump up. The "jump" came
from the verb 跳.

In this case 起来 is preceded by the verb 爬, which means to crawl/climb, and in this...

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 14th March 2008, 01:23 AM

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The Revival of Traditional Characters is Coming?

Views: 2,735

Posted By ange9s

Re: The Revival of Traditional Characters is Coming?

Most Chinese people I know don't have any problem reading traditional characters, but have
problems writing them. A lot of recent tv reports talk about how young people can't hand-write
characters as...

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Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 15th April 2008, 03:54 AM

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What is HSK?

Views: 551

Posted By renzhe

Re: What is HSK?

In short, no. The whole thing is a bit complicated.

There are 11 grades in the HSK test, 1-3 is basic, 3-8 is elementary/intermediate and 9-11 is the
advanced test.

There are also word/character...

Forum: Reading and Writing 14th April 2008, 11:42 PM

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What is HSK?

Views: 551

Posted By renzhe

Re: What is HSK?

Here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hànyǔ_Shuǐpíng_Kǎoshì)

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 5th May 2008, 08:30 PM

Replies: 4

five types of chinese articles

Views: 239

Posted By basmalah_s

Re: five types of chinese articles

Thank you.

Forum: Reading and Writing 2nd May 2008, 12:14 AM

Replies: 4

five types of chinese articles

Views: 239

Posted By basmalah_s

last four articles

Would some one explain these articles and analyze for me why are they considered to be
随笔文,说明文,议论文,读后感 respectively?
Thanks in advance.

Forum: Reading and Writing 2nd May 2008, 12:09 AM

Replies: 4

five types of chinese articles

Views: 239

Posted By basmalah_s

Another four articles

Would some one explain these articles and analyze for me why are they considered to be
随笔文,说明文,议论文,读后感 respectively?
Thanks in advance.

Forum: Reading and Writing 1st May 2008, 11:36 PM

Replies: 4

five types of chinese articles

Views: 239

Posted By basmalah_s

five types of chinese articles

Would some one explain these articles and analyze for me why are they considered to be
随笔文,说明文,议论文,读后感,评论文respectively?
Thanks in advance.

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Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 08:46 AM

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Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By imron

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

I think it's all about consistency. When you have the same characters being romanised in different
ways in different areas then it can lead to confusion. So then it comes down to which standard
to...

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson

Chinese School - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 13th February 2007, 02:41 PM

Replies: 12

Basic Python module for adso

Views: 2,121

Posted By bogleg

Re: Basic Python module for adso

I'm clamouring! Hook us up! :lol:

Chris

Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 11th November 2006, 11:24 PM

Replies: 12

Basic Python module for adso

Views: 2,121

Posted By bogleg

Hi Imron, Awesome work. Would you mind if I...

Hi Imron,

Awesome work. Would you mind if I ported something like this over to Java? I'd love to be able use
it in the ZDT and I'm sure others would use it as well.

Chris

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Chinese Tutor - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th January 2005, 04:45 AM

Replies: 20

Hardest sound to pronounce?

Views: 6,838

Posted By djwebb2004

I have queried my Chinese teacher on...

I have queried my Chinese teacher on "r" and "rui", and although it sounds odd, she tells me I
pronounce itt right. Riben ren is another odd things to say. The key point is that r is the
voiced...

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Chinese School - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 21st June 2004, 03:08 PM

Replies: 44

Poll: Why learning spoken Chinese as a foreigner is easy and hard

Views: 7,920

Posted By xuechengfeng

From what I understand it is best to immerse...

From what I understand it is best to immerse yourself into the culture, and be in China to further
your language ability, but 5 year minimum? I don't know about that.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd June 2005, 07:37 AM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By venture160

personally I don't take learning Chinese as a...

personally I don't take learning Chinese as a hobby, but as a serious study to which i devote
hours to, and I will be studying for twelve months straight in China coming this June on top of
a...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd June 2005, 03:39 AM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By venture160

I do agree that down the road, maybe 5-10 years...

I do agree that down the road, maybe 5-10 years we could see a very lage increase of Chinese
learners in the western countries, especially the United States. Public schools are just beginning
to...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th May 2005, 07:58 AM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By venture160

yea, he is a news anchor though, so he speaks...

yea, he is a news anchor though, so he speaks alot faster, really really impressive. I will try
and dig up a link. Yea there are alot of no names running around that have Chinese that is quite...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 27th May 2005, 12:06 PM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By venture160

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Just wondering if you have ever come across anyone who has a disgustingly awesome mandarin
proficiency. I know there is Dashan etc, but what about all those foreigners who come to study
their asses...

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Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th July 2005, 02:17 AM

Replies: 52

Pinyin used in Taiwan?

Views: 4,972

Posted By devi9

If it's not used in Taiwan, where is it used? Or...

If it's not used in Taiwan, where is it used? Or is it used at all?

Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th July 2005, 02:01 AM

Replies: 52

Pinyin used in Taiwan?

Views: 4,972

Posted By devi9

does anyone know when taiwan implemented this...

does anyone know when taiwan implemented this system?

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Learn Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: bhchao

Forum: Speaking and Listening 26th June 2004, 05:17 AM

Replies: 55

Married to a Chinese in the U.S.?

Views: 7,036

Posted By bhchao

I disagree with this. Many Asian women go for...

I disagree with this. Many Asian women go for Caucasian partners because ethnic origin and
physical features are not a factor for them in choosing a partner. As long as their personalities
are...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd June 2004, 01:07 AM

Replies: 55

Married to a Chinese in the U.S.?

Views: 7,036

Posted By bhchao

I think Chinese ladies are more inclined than the...

I think Chinese ladies are more inclined than the men to marry Caucasians. In Los Angeles where I
live, I see a lot of Chinese women with Caucasian husbands/dates, but rarely see Chinese men
dating...

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: muyongshi

Forum: Speaking and Listening 24th September 2007, 01:24 PM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By muyongshi

Re: most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

That's what happens when you type something 5 minutes after waking up and just let your computer
think for you... I just typed "guahuzi" and that is what my input came up with- didn't even bother
to...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 24th September 2007, 07:04 AM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By muyongshi

Re: most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Well probably not as embarrassing as it was just plain out funny (especially since I realized my
mistake right away and we all had a good laugh)

One day about 6 months ago I wanted to say 刮胡子 but...

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: nnt

Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th May 2004, 12:36 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

See the link here:...

See the link here:
http://www.kanjistep.com/en/about/

They not only copied the script to transcribe Japanese words, but also borrowed 100% (not just
80%...) of Chinese vocabulary, although 90% of...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd May 2004, 12:07 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

You're not Japanese, how do you know a Japanese...

You're not Japanese, how do you know a Japanese doesn't know ancient chinese pronunciation :wink: ?

(See here for a similar story:
http://www.chinapage.com/story/fish.html
)

English and German...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st May 2004, 04:53 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

It's Hán Vit (Chinese pronounced Vietnamese...

It's Hán Vit (Chinese pronounced Vietnamese way). You can take any Chinese text, modern or
classic, and pronounce it Vietnamese way: it's Sino-Vietnamese.
A modern Chinese text in Hán Vit,...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st May 2004, 04:13 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

We should distinguish Hán Vit words and Hán Vit...

We should distinguish Hán Vit words and Hán Vit as Sino-Vietnamese (Chinese language with
Vietnamese pronunciation).
Vietnamese do not "speak" Hán Vit, but Vietnamese vocabulary is full of Hán...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th April 2004, 12:46 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

I've found an interesting link (Big5 code)about...

I've found an interesting link (Big5 code)about William H. Baxter:

http://www.geocities.com/sgoertzen/Chinese/mcb5.htm

Li Bai's rhyme words:
明 [微庚開三] ming2 (minh) < mjaeng 'bright'
...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th April 2004, 01:54 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

shibo77: Could you find a reconstruction of...

shibo77:

Could you find a reconstruction of Tang's era pronunciation of the above text? I think it would be
even more interesting than the E-zhou pronunciation (from which all variants have much...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th April 2004, 09:06 AM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

道可道, 非常道. 名可名, 非常名. 無, 名天地之始; 有, 名萬物之母. In Han...

道可道, 非常道. 名可名, 非常名. 無, 名天地之始; 有, 名萬物之母.

In Han Viêt:

Dao kha dao, phi thng dao. Danh kha danh, phi thng danh. V^o, danh thiên
dia chi thuy, hu, danh van v^at chi m^au.

(There is...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 27th April 2004, 02:57 AM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

39degN and shibo77 : As linguists say: "The...

39degN and shibo77 :
As linguists say:
"The proof of a pudding is is in the eating" :wink: (I love pudding theory...)
So I'm waiting for your poem in Classical E Zhou pronunciation, in order to...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 26th April 2004, 03:05 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

You needn't... You just have to learn Vietnamese...

You needn't... You just have to learn Vietnamese "Pinyin" (Han Viêt) to read Chinese texts
Vietnamese way.

It seems to me that the Vietnamese pronunciation of 法律 (pháp lut with ph=f) is closest...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 10th April 2004, 03:38 AM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

I think that initially, they adopted the script...

I think that initially, they adopted the script and the pronunciation (although with some foreign
accent, but certainly without the mandarin's 儿 :wink: ). For Classical Chinese was, at least
in...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 9th April 2004, 05:02 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

About relationship between Classical Chinese,...

About relationship between Classical Chinese, spoken Chinese and Vietnamese, you can see this link:
http://www.cjvlang.com/Writing/writsys/writviet.html

more particularly:

I think was is common...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th April 2004, 04:33 AM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By nnt

Lu Yi Si: You just forget that Thai peoples...

Lu Yi Si:
You just forget that Thai peoples (including Tay in Vietnam and Laotians in Laos) came from Yunnan
around the 12th-13th century, so it's no surprise that some words may be borrowed from...

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Search took 0.14 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: flameproof

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th May 2007, 07:09 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By flameproof

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Looking at CPod's changes the last few month I feel like those guys are in love with computer
technology. Main focus now seem to be gadgets, rather then useful functions. And still nothing is
really...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd February 2007, 05:02 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By flameproof

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

I don't think just a wife will bring automatically a difference. Simple because YOU YOURSELF have
to make the difference.

I still listen sometimes to CPod, know I make the lessons more effective by...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th January 2007, 05:22 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By flameproof

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

thph2006
Fair point. I think CLO is well suited too.

It's easy to lose focus and get into all sort of technical discussions about pro and anti, likes
and dislikes, rather then just use the material...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 14th January 2007, 08:57 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By flameproof

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

I listened to a lesson of www.chineselearnonline.com . Have to say, I do miss Ken and Jenny. CLO
sounds (again) dead boring.

I think quite a great part of the success of Cpod is that it's actually...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd December 2006, 11:47 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By flameproof

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Yes and no. You still have to do the work. The same way running shoes do not make you a runner.

ChinesePod is great. It's funny and fun to listen to. However, you will not get fluent. Fluency
will...

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.09 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: SteveK

Forum: Speaking and Listening 5th May 2007, 05:30 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

The launching of the new LingQ system has been delayed for one major reason. We tried to produce
an off line "client" version and we gave up after one year spent on the project. We just could
not...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 10th February 2007, 01:20 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

We are very close to having a multilanguage version. I am Beta testing for Russian, and others for
German right now. Asian languages are a few weeks away. I will certainly let you know when we
are...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th February 2007, 06:24 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

We learn by relating new things to things we already know. That is why in the first stages of
learning a new language it is useful to have the text in a language you already know, usually
your...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th February 2007, 01:03 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I speak 10 languages and have attacked Korean and Russian these last two years. I am 61.
When you begin you do not need a teacher, in fact you cannot use a teacher. You just need to
listen and read...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 6th February 2007, 12:36 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I have been away for a few days without Internet contact. I am going into a 90km cross county ski
race in Sweden (the Vasaloppet) in March and since I am not a big cross country skier (and 61) I...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st February 2007, 01:40 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

For a bilingual discussion of language learning (Chinese and English) please go to

http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheLinguistOnLanguage-Chinese

and scroll down to the video podcast of the discussion...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st February 2007, 01:20 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By SteveK

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

I noticed this thread as a referrer to my blog so I thought I would comment here.
In my view a useful and realistic goal of language learning is fluency, not perfection. One of the
most important...

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Chinese Online Class - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.02 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Quest

Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th February 2006, 05:27 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By Quest

I thought you've heard all the other Chinese...

I thought you've heard all the other Chinese languages to come to that conclusion.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 07:35 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By Quest

But for every one of the caucasian celebrities,...

But for every one of the caucasian celebrities, there're 10 times more Chinese/Japnese/Korean
models... I think the number of Chinese that are actually into American pop culture is very
limited,...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th January 2006, 10:17 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By Quest

Native speakers dont have to concentrate heavily...

Native speakers dont have to concentrate heavily on the tones, and Shanghainese for Mandarin and
Cantonese speakers is not 'really easy' to speak.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th January 2006, 02:52 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By Quest

I don't think the 方言 label is political, it just...

I don't think the 方言 label is political, it just means 地方语言 local tongue. In Chinese,
I don't see anything wrong calling 上海话,广州话,客家话,福州话,
北京话,汉语方言。

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Friday, May 30, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.29 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: carlo

Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th August 2005, 11:28 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By carlo

Gato, Quest, very helpful comments, thanks a lot....

Gato, Quest, very helpful comments, thanks a lot. I can hear what's wrong now after you've pointed
it out. It seems when speaking faster my second tones have a tendency to flatten out and become...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 18th August 2005, 10:43 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By carlo

Mind if I join in? I've taped this before going...

Mind if I join in? I've taped this before going to work this morning, hope the attachment isn't
too large. As my native language is Italian, I probably have different pronunciation issues than
the...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 12th August 2005, 10:34 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By carlo

If you don't mind a comment from a fellow...

If you don't mind a comment from a fellow learner, I think you're brilliant. The rhythm is
excellent. Quest did a nice job already, if I may I'll say this:

文物 (second-last sentence) does sound like...

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: HashiriKata

Forum: Speaking and Listening 9th March 2007, 01:57 PM

Replies: 75

New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (下)

Views: 12,291

Posted By HashiriKata

Re: New Antiwave Podcast 超级难说6 - 猪年为何不能说猪?

I think some people do this as a way to display their cooking/ artistic skills (in imitation
foods). I don't know of any Buddhist monk who likes eating fake meat and I don't imagine there
are....

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th January 2006, 11:45 PM

Replies: 82

How could I get better at tones?

Views: 18,328

Posted By deezy

As a child, I sometimes had trouble...

As a child, I sometimes had trouble distinguishing between tones 2 and 3. However, I would think
that for most, the differences between 1 vs 2/3 vs 4 at least should be fairly easily obvious? Or
am...

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.08 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: deezy

Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th January 2006, 11:45 PM

Replies: 82

How could I get better at tones?

Views: 18,328

Posted By deezy

As a child, I sometimes had trouble...

As a child, I sometimes had trouble distinguishing between tones 2 and 3. However, I would think
that for most, the differences between 1 vs 2/3 vs 4 at least should be fairly easily obvious? Or
am...

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Chinese School - Miss Intercontinental Beauty Pageant's final

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hotos

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�� Regional disparity causes wealth gap in China

�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

  Photos

�� Miss Intercontinental Beauty Pageant's final

�� Jeans Fever Exhibition held in Hong Kong

�� Softdrink cans 'Huge football'

��Home>>

Miss Intercontinental Beauty Pageant's final

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-31 19:07:32

The final of Miss Intercontinental 2005 held in Huangshan City, East
China's Anhui Province July 30, 2005.

Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service

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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Learn Chinese online - First Wal-Mart store opens in Shanghai

Home Business China International Culture��Edu Sci��Tech Sports Life Travel P
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First Wal-Mart store opens in Shanghai

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-28 17:25:48

Shoppers flock to a newly-opened Wal-Mart store in the Pudong New Area of
Shanghai July 28, 2005. It's the world's largest retailer's first
shopping mall in Shanghai. Wal-Mart plans to increase its China outlets
to 90 by the end of 2006.

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Saturday, May 24, 2008

Chinese School - Oyster distribution center in Fujian

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�� Regional disparity causes wealth gap in China

�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

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�� Yuelu Imperial Academy

�� Lowest weather station in China

�� Beauties show national costumes

��Home>>Photos

Oyster distribution center in Fujian

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-27 15:12:05

On the morning of July 26, fishermen in the Beijiang Village of Xiamei
Town in Fujian's Zhangpu County were processing oysters. Xiamei Town has
over 30,000 MU (ca 4942 acres) of oyster farms, which will produce more
than 7 kilotons of fresh oysters this year. Oysters produced in the town
are sold in the Chinese mainland, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan. At
present, Xiamei Town has become the largest oyster production and
processing base and distribution center in Fujian.

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Friday, May 23, 2008

Chinese School - Miss Bikini showed up in Nanning

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�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

�� Chinese women upside down in 40 years

  Photos

�� Miss Bikini showed up in Nanning

�� Henan acrobats performed in San Francisco

�� A lovely scene after pouring rain

��Home>>

Miss Bikini showed up in Nanning

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-26 16:21:35

42 contestants of 2005 Miss Bikini of the Universe Pageant showed up on
July 25, 2005, in Nanning, capital of Guangxi.

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Computers of strange shapes showed up in Taipei

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�� Chinese women upside down in 40 years

�� China's wish list

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�� Computers of strange shapes showed up in Taipei

�� World's 3rd largest E-games expo to settle down in Shanghai

�� Tibetan herdsmen migrated to new pasture

��Home>>Photos

Computers of strange shapes showed up in Taipei

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-25 16:21:23

Participating works of the third "PC Image Creation Contest" were on
display in Taipei World Trade Center on July 22, 2005. The contest was
divided into two groups including "individual group" focusing on digital
family and "campus group" aiming at digital family, digital office and
mobile life concept. Photo shows individual group's work called "EYE," a
computer in the shape of an eye.

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Chinese School - Market rises on first day after yuan reform

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�� Chinese women upside down in 40 years

�� China's wish list

�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

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�� Miss Bikini performed in Linfen

�� Shanghai hosts underware fashion show

�� Tibetan farmers celebrates Harvest Festival

��Home>>Business

Market rises on first day after yuan reform

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-23 19:24:47

(Source: China Daily)

China's stock market rises on first day after yuan reform.

July 23 - Thursday's yuan revaluation showed an immediate upward impact
on China's stock market. However, analysts are cautious of how long this
will last.
The benchmark Shanghai composite index climbed 2.5 per cent to end
Friday's trading at 1,046.32 points, with a turnover more than double
that of the previous day.
Airline and petrochemical stocks led the day's active trading as the
biggest beneficiary of the yuan move, traders said.
Shares in Hainan Airlines, a regional carrier based in South China's
Hainan Province, soared almost 10 per cent to end at 2.33 yuan (29 US
cents), on investors' expectations that China's carriers would face lower
financing costs as they have a large chunk of their borrowings in foreign
currencies.
Prices of China Eastern rose 7.11 per cent and 4.18 per cent for China
Southern.
Investors also poured money into refiners that rely heavily on oil
imports and thus are expected to benefit from lower costs.
Sinopec, Asia's top refiner, rose 5.8 per cent to 3.83 yuan (47 US cents).
"The 2-per-cent yuan revaluation is a direct trigger, but it is only part
of the reason for today's market upturn," said Ba Shusong, a senior
economist with the State Council's Development Research Centre.
"June's economic data, signalling the government's loosening of its
credit tightening policy, plus the progressing reform on the non-tradable
shares, also helped boost investors' morale."
But some analysts were more pessimistic about the market.
The positive impact of the yuan revaluation "may last only two or three
days," said Xu Gang, research head at CITIC Securities.
"The yuan move, in the longer term, will have a negative impact on
China's stock market, especially on the country's exporters," Xu said.
The change will blunt their price edge in overseas markets and burden
them with higher production and operating costs as many pay their bills
and employees in RMB.
During Friday's trading, investors shunned exporters. For example, the
textile firm Youngor Group Co Ltd fell 1.75 per cent to 3.36 yuan (41 US
cents).
Following China's move, Malaysia also unpegged its ringgit from the US
dollar to replace it with a managed float.
The new yuan regime will likely lead to further yuan revaluation over
time and encourage greater currency appreciation in other Asian
countries, thus leading to a burden shift of the US dollar adjustment
from Europe to Asia, said David Woo, head of global forex strategy at
Barclays Capital.
At the first-day trading after revaluation, the yuan closed weaker at
8.1111 to the US dollar.

          ��Warrants to arrive in China's stock markets (2005-07-19)
          ��85tock investors suffered loss (2005-07-05)
          ��Transparency of stock market reform promised (2005-06-27)
          ��China's stock market rebounds (2005-06-14)
          ��Stocks soars over 8% Wednesday (2005-06-08)
          ��China's stock markets slumping to 8-year lows (2005-06-06)

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Chinese Online Class - China's national flowers proposed

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�� China's wish list

�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

  Photos

�� China's national flowers proposed

�� Cross-straits Taoism concert held in Taipei

�� Students in Jilin practiced calligraphy

��Home>>

China's national flowers proposed

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-22 11:03:05

Sixty-two members from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese
Academy of Engineering have proposed selecting the plum blossom and tree
peony as China's two national flowers. Tree peony has been popular since
the 7th century and represents good fortune, love and prosperity and is
the symbol of material world. (File photo)

The plum blossom is one of the few flowers that blossoms in winter. (File
photo) Sixty-two members from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the
Chinese Academy of Engineering have proposed selecting the plum blossom
and tree peony as China's two national flowers. Plum blossom symbolises
the unyielding Chinese spirit that never bows to coldness and is the
symbol of the spiritual world. (File photo)

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Rare Kang Xi Dictionary

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�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

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�� Rare Kang Xi Dictionary

�� Xinjiang's snake charmer

�� Typhoon Haitang downgraded

��Home>>

Rare Kang Xi Dictionary

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-21 14:06:39

Wang Qingyi, a collector from Shandong's Zouping County, shows 7 volumes
of official version of Kang Xi Dictionary (a keynote Chinese dictionary
compiled in 1710) that he collected on July 18, 2005. The dictionary,
designed in Song (960-1279) printing style, consists of 40 volumes. The
16cm times 28.5 cm dictionary was chiefly in the possession of the
emperor, using it as an award for high officials who have made
significant contributions to the country. Such dictionaries are rarely
seen in the folk. According to authoritative collectors, there are at
most ten sets of official edition of Kangxi Dictionaries in the world.

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Sunday, May 18, 2008

Chinese language - China mainland braces for typhoon

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�� China's wish list

�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

  Photos

�� China mainland braces for typhoon

�� Song and dance of Miao ethnic group

�� Cool down in thousand-year-old street

��Home>>

China mainland braces for typhoon

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-19 17:39:37

Water whippped up by Typhoon Haitang hits the shore of Zhejiang's Wenling
coast, July 18, 2005.

Chinese soldiers help evacuate local residents at a village in
southwestern China's Fujian province July 18, 2005. More than 850,000
residents from coastal areas in eastern China's Fujian and Zhejiang
provinces were relocated on July 18 as Typhoon Haitang bore down on the
region after pounding Taiwan with heavy winds and rain.

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

Learn mandarin - Largest single-building university library

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�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

  Photos

�� Largest single-building university library

�� Auto imports slumped in the first half

�� Strange mollusk emerged inside the stomach of crucian

��Home>>

Largest single-building university library

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-18 16:04:53

The library of Hubei's China Three Gorges University sits by Yichang's
Daxue road. As the largest single-building and multifunctional university
library in China, it can hold 30,000 teachers and students at one time to
read, have lectures and communicate here.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

Learn Chinese - Taekwondo craze in summer holiday

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�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

  Photos

�� Taekwondo craze in summer holiday

�� 'Stove tables' show up in a restaurant

�� First Olympic reading room opened

��Home>>

Taekwondo craze in summer holiday

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-16 19:55:41

More than 100 school students were taking Taekwondo training course in a
club in Jiangxi��s Nankang on July 15th. According to a coach of the
Taekwondo club, many children come here for Taekwondo training during the
summer holiday. Their parents expect them health and strong will. The
kids also got relaxed through the physical training.

E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Learn Chinese - Stewardesses of China Southern Airlines to wear new uniforms

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�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

  Photos

�� Abundant historical relics of Macau

�� Pupil zookeepers in Jinan

�� Oriental white storks build nests

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Stewardesses of China Southern Airlines to wear new uniforms

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-14 16:46:39

On July 12th, China Southern Airlines held an exhibition and appraisal
meeting for its stewardesses' new uniforms in Guangzhou. Famous designers
from France, Japan, Hong Kong, etc. competed in the design proposal.

E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Learn mandarin - Volkswagen sees China sales slump

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�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

�� Three characteristics in China's aging population

  Photos

�� Streets flooded in Jinan

�� Kindergarten teacher exercise tae kwon do

�� Cooking champion performs in his hometown

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Volkswagen sees China sales slump

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-13 16:28:23

A Volkswagen Touareg is displayed at a showroom in Beijing, 13 July 2005.
Hit by corruption allegations at home, German carmaker Volkswagen AG
appears to be in big trouble in China too after reporting a sharp drop in
sales while those of rivals soar, as half year sales results, saying its
two mainland joint ventures shifted a disappointing 265,000 vehicles in
the first half of 2005 after 306,000 for the first half of 2004.

E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Waterfall in Lianyungang

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�� Three characteristics in China's aging population

�� Ten social strata formed in China

�� Numerous "millionaires" in China?

  Photos

�� Turpan farmers busy in drying Hami melons

�� Prayers with pets

�� Gezhou Dam releases floodwater

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Waterfall in Lianyungang

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-12 15:28:07

Several tourists were appreciating the waterfall in the Yunzhongjian
Scenic Spot after a heavy rain on July 9, 2005. Yunzhongjian Scenic Spot,
cited as the "stream in the cloud," is located in the development zone in
Lianyungang and is famous for its unique natural beauty and the gushing
waterfall. In rain seasons, the scenic spot becomes a perfect resort for
tourists to escape the intense heat in summer.

E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
8610-68327649

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Monday, May 12, 2008

Chinese language - Stunt of Miao nationality

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�� Numerous "millionaires" in China?

�� China's economy starts modest adjustment

�� Can China create an inexpensive college degree?

  Photos

�� Stunt of Miao nationality

�� Yangshan deep water port project shown in Marine Expo

�� Luoyang Huimeng Lotus Festival kicks off

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Stunt of Miao nationality

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-11 15:28:35

Miao young men living in mountain areas of west Hunan are good at
climbing. Photo shows three Miao young men climbed up to a wooden rod at
a height of 18 meters with their bare hands in the Miao Village of the
Dehang Scenic Spot in west Hunan province, in early July. While two of
them were stabilizing the rod, the other one showed off his stunt of
standing on his head on the rod without any other protections.

E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Chinese School - Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

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�� China's economy starts modest adjustment

�� Can China create an inexpensive college degree?

�� Beijing youth spending parent's nestegg

  Photos

�� Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

�� Top models stage "Thai Fashion Show" in Beijing

�� Animals try to cool themselves

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Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-08 14:59:39

(July 7th) In the complex building of Shandong College of Arts, Ge
Pingchun from Ju County, Rizhao is displaying the colorful sand painting
"Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival" he created. The painting is 12
meters in length, 0.43 meter in width and six kilograms in weight. It was
created with fine sand from Rizhao beach, paper, and glue made by Ge
himself. Being enlarged with 1:2 ratio from the original size, the
painting took Ge 15 months for production. Unlike other sand paintings,
this one is color-fast and firm and can be folded and rolled easily,
making it convenient to carry.

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Friday, May 9, 2008

Chinese Online Class - New Party chairman arrives in Guangzhou

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�� China's economy starts modest adjustment

�� Can China create an inexpensive college degree?

�� Beijing youth spending parent's nestegg

  Photos

�� Cheap laptops stir the market

�� Folk stunt at the Drum Festival

�� Visitors experience "flames" at Flaming Mount

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New Party chairman arrives in Guangzhou

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-06 17:37:50

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)

GUANGZHOU, July 6 - The New Party, a third opposition party in Taiwan,
has launched a "journey of Chinese nation," as it calls, to the mainland.
The 30-member delegation led by Yu Muming, chairman of the New Party,
arrived Wednesday afternoon in the southern city of Guangzhou, the first
stop of the eight-day trip (from July 6 to 13). The delegation will also
visit the cities of Nanjing, Dalian and Beijing.
Yu Muming told reporters that the trip follows the Kuomintang's landmark
visit to the Chinese mainland in April and that of the People First Party
soon after, and will help improve ties across the Taiwan Strait.
The mainland visit is called "the New Party's delegation to visit the
mainland in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the victory over the
War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression." Taiwan media said the
trip could be abbreviated as the "journey of Chinese nation".
In Guangzhou, the delegation will pay tribute to the Huanghuagang 72
Martyrs' Tombs, where 72 people killed in an abortive uprising to
overthrow the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) were honored.
In Nanjing, the delegation will pay tribute to the Mausoleum of Dr. Sun
Yat-sen, forerunner of China's democratic revolution, and visit the
Memorial Hall of the Victims in the Nanjing Massacre conducted by
Japanese invading troops in World War II. In Beijing, the delegation will
visit the Memorial Hall of the War of Resistance against Japanese
Aggression and have discussions with mainland scholars in a symposium.

          ��Taiwan's New Party to visit mainland (2005-06-29)
          ��Taiwan's New Party delegation to visit mainland (2005-06-29)

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