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Intro to Chinese
    Language
    介绍中文
     Sarah Kowalski
Why Chinese?


• About one-fifth of the world’s population, or over one
  billion people, speak some form of Chinese as their
  native language.
• Chinese has more speakers in the world than any
  other language.
• China is known as “factory to the world” for its huge
  export market. Knowing Chinese and China’s culture
  will help anyone wanting to do international business.
3 Elements to Memorizing
         a Chinese Word



 Character(s)
 Pronunciation
 Tone(s)
Character Types


Some Chinese characters developed from
pictures.
•Pictures drawn of an object (pictographs)


•Or pictures drawn to represent an idea
(ideographs).
 Shan 山 developed from a drawing of a
  mountain (pictograph).
 ZHONG 中 Represents the idea of
  middle/center (ideograph/ideogram).
 hao 好 is made from a picture of a
  woman and a baby. It means “good,”
  which comes from the idea that goodness is
  a mother with her son
  (ideographic/ideogrammic compound).
Semantic-Phonetic Compounds

  •   In 100 CE, a famous scholar, Xǚ Shèn studied characters and found that
      only 4% were pictographs, while many were related to sound.

• Examples of characters related by sound (phoenetics).

• Horse:                   马          mǎ​

• Mother:                  妈          mā​            woman 女 + 马

• Yell at/scold:           骂          mà​            2 mouths 口 + 马

• Ant:                               蚂         mǎ​           bug 虫 + 马

• Headboard:               杩          mà​            wood 木 + 马
Read Chinese in One Year!?



•        There are over 40,000 characters in a large dictionary, but less
    than 10,000 are commonly used.

•         Well-educated Chinese recognize about 6,000-7,000 characters,
    but if you can learn 3,000 characters, you can read a newspaper and be
    considered literate.

•        If you learned 10 characters a day, you could theoretically read
    Chinese in less than 1 year!
Pronunciation
•     People who aren’t educated in China (such as
    yourselves), can’t read characters.

• To address this problem, and to increase literacy in
    China as well, the P.R.C. adopted Hanyu Pinyin in
    1958.

•     Most Americans and Europeans learn Chinese
    through Pinyin, and Chinese parents also use it to
    teach their children proper pronunciation of new words.

• Chinese Sounds in English
Pinyin 汉语拼 音
• Pinyin has three parts:

• Initials (like American consonants, except no “V”)

• Finals (like American vowels, can also end with “n” or
  “ng” or “r”)

• Tones (4 main, 1 neutral)

• http://www.quickmandarin.com/chinesepinyintable/
  Good Pinyin Chart
•This great chart to practice your pinyin pronunciation can be found
at ChinesePod.com, as well as many other free and fee-based
resources for studying Chinese.
Have you mastered English Spelling?
                    Chinese will be a breeze!

                         Pinyin has only about 400 different sounds.
                                   English has over 4,000.




               English spells the same sound o in at least ten different ways:
                   so, sow, sew, oh, owe, dough, doe, beau, soak, soul.

             It uses the same letter o to represent at least 8 different sounds in
                          so, to, on, honey, horse, woman, borough

                                   (DeFrancis 1984a:112).

The number of different spellings for the 40 English phonemes has been variously estimated at
 600 (Zachrisson 1931:4), 1,120-1,768 (Nyikos 1988; see 298 below), and 2,000 (Alisjahbana
                                 1965:530; Daniels 1985:34).

                      http://pinyin.info/readings/texts/visible/index.html
                                       by John DeFrancis

 Statistics compiled by Gao and Yin show about 430 (not counting tones) spoken syllables for
                  standard Mandarin compared to 4,030 for English (1983:70).
Tones Demo



•   Practice the four tones
•   http://www.newconceptmandarin.com/support/Intro_Pinyi
    n.asp
Conclusion
• Learning Chinese may seem much more difficult than
   learning English, but several elements make oral Chinese,
   in fact, easier! (consistent spelling in the pinyin system, less
   sound combinations)

• To learn Chinese words, you need to master three
   components: character, pronunciation, and tone.

• Chinese characters may be composed of smaller
   components, called “radicals” which can represent a sound
   or a meaning. There are several types of characters,
   including but not limited to pictographs, ideographs, and
   semantic-phonetic compounds.

• Learning Chinese can help you in future business/job
   prospects, can give you a better understanding of your own
   language and culture, and can enable you to communicate
   with the majority of the world’s population!

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Basic Introduction to Chinese Language

  • 1. Intro to Chinese Language 介绍中文 Sarah Kowalski
  • 2. Why Chinese? • About one-fifth of the world’s population, or over one billion people, speak some form of Chinese as their native language. • Chinese has more speakers in the world than any other language. • China is known as “factory to the world” for its huge export market. Knowing Chinese and China’s culture will help anyone wanting to do international business.
  • 3. 3 Elements to Memorizing a Chinese Word  Character(s)  Pronunciation  Tone(s)
  • 4. Character Types Some Chinese characters developed from pictures. •Pictures drawn of an object (pictographs) •Or pictures drawn to represent an idea (ideographs).
  • 5.  Shan 山 developed from a drawing of a mountain (pictograph).  ZHONG 中 Represents the idea of middle/center (ideograph/ideogram).  hao 好 is made from a picture of a woman and a baby. It means “good,” which comes from the idea that goodness is a mother with her son (ideographic/ideogrammic compound).
  • 6. Semantic-Phonetic Compounds • In 100 CE, a famous scholar, Xǚ Shèn studied characters and found that only 4% were pictographs, while many were related to sound. • Examples of characters related by sound (phoenetics). • Horse: 马 mǎ​ • Mother: 妈 mā​ woman 女 + 马 • Yell at/scold: 骂 mà​ 2 mouths 口 + 马 • Ant: 蚂 mǎ​ bug 虫 + 马 • Headboard: 杩 mà​ wood 木 + 马
  • 7. Read Chinese in One Year!? • There are over 40,000 characters in a large dictionary, but less than 10,000 are commonly used. • Well-educated Chinese recognize about 6,000-7,000 characters, but if you can learn 3,000 characters, you can read a newspaper and be considered literate. • If you learned 10 characters a day, you could theoretically read Chinese in less than 1 year!
  • 8. Pronunciation • People who aren’t educated in China (such as yourselves), can’t read characters. • To address this problem, and to increase literacy in China as well, the P.R.C. adopted Hanyu Pinyin in 1958. • Most Americans and Europeans learn Chinese through Pinyin, and Chinese parents also use it to teach their children proper pronunciation of new words. • Chinese Sounds in English
  • 9. Pinyin 汉语拼 音 • Pinyin has three parts: • Initials (like American consonants, except no “V”) • Finals (like American vowels, can also end with “n” or “ng” or “r”) • Tones (4 main, 1 neutral) • http://www.quickmandarin.com/chinesepinyintable/ Good Pinyin Chart
  • 10. •This great chart to practice your pinyin pronunciation can be found at ChinesePod.com, as well as many other free and fee-based resources for studying Chinese.
  • 11. Have you mastered English Spelling? Chinese will be a breeze! Pinyin has only about 400 different sounds. English has over 4,000. English spells the same sound o in at least ten different ways: so, sow, sew, oh, owe, dough, doe, beau, soak, soul. It uses the same letter o to represent at least 8 different sounds in so, to, on, honey, horse, woman, borough (DeFrancis 1984a:112). The number of different spellings for the 40 English phonemes has been variously estimated at 600 (Zachrisson 1931:4), 1,120-1,768 (Nyikos 1988; see 298 below), and 2,000 (Alisjahbana 1965:530; Daniels 1985:34). http://pinyin.info/readings/texts/visible/index.html by John DeFrancis Statistics compiled by Gao and Yin show about 430 (not counting tones) spoken syllables for standard Mandarin compared to 4,030 for English (1983:70).
  • 12. Tones Demo • Practice the four tones • http://www.newconceptmandarin.com/support/Intro_Pinyi n.asp
  • 13. Conclusion • Learning Chinese may seem much more difficult than learning English, but several elements make oral Chinese, in fact, easier! (consistent spelling in the pinyin system, less sound combinations) • To learn Chinese words, you need to master three components: character, pronunciation, and tone. • Chinese characters may be composed of smaller components, called “radicals” which can represent a sound or a meaning. There are several types of characters, including but not limited to pictographs, ideographs, and semantic-phonetic compounds. • Learning Chinese can help you in future business/job prospects, can give you a better understanding of your own language and culture, and can enable you to communicate with the majority of the world’s population!