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Chinese (Standard) | |
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lucvileyn
Newbie ![]() Joined: 08 December 2006 Location: Belgium Online Status: Offline Posts: 16 |
![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 15 June 2007 at 8:22am |
Hello, I'm learning Chinese at the Confucius Institute in Brussels, second year. I've made a website for learning Chinese Characters (Based on new Practical Chinese Reader, part 1). In a few months, I'll expand the site. All comments are welcome.
http://www.luc-vileyn.cn Edited by lucvileyn - 04 July 2007 at 5:09am |
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linky
Newbie ![]() Joined: 13 March 2008 Online Status: Offline Posts: 2 |
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maybe you can learn from a native speaker,it is a good way!
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carolina_yeliza
Newbie ![]() Joined: 22 April 2008 Location: Spain Online Status: Offline Posts: 7 |
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I am pretty good in speaking a Chinese language but I have to admit that I'm not good when it comes to writing.
Talking to a native speaker is a good idea if you are after on the right accent but I don't think it will work on learning a Chinese characters. You can also try some tutorials designed to help people to understand and easily remember Chinese characters. |
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Orange
Newbie ![]() Joined: 13 January 2008 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3 |
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There is no other way about but writing the characters as much as possible. So you need lots of pencils, square-lined pads and any breaktime you can spare on it. In this way, your writing muscles will be made to remember those characters. You can not understand them in order to remember them. I write Chinese charaters spontaneously. I guess it goes with everything about language learning, either speaking or writing. Chinese natives who can read and write are no exception. I heard many Chinese people's proficiency in writing Hanzi are degrading due to computer typing. Many of us use the Pinyin input programme, thus the shrinking time of imaging characters in our mind's eye and muscle exercising. And there is one more thing for beginners. That is to pay attention to the correct order of putting down the strokes of each charater. Correct strokes ordering can make the handwriting easy and comfortable.
Edited by Orange - 27 April 2008 at 2:43am |
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Camila
Newbie ![]() Joined: 22 April 2008 Location: Portugal Online Status: Offline Posts: 5 |
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Ni hao! I've learned Mandarin during my college years. I'm not a good speaker but i knew some basic mandarin. I can also write some words in Chinese character format but I'm not expert. I visited some online translation site when i needed help in creating my papers.
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Cost EffectiveLanguage TranslationServices
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mspxlation
Newbie ![]() Joined: 29 November 2007 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 7 |
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The best way to learn characters is to copy meaningful material over and over.
Rather than learning individual characters, which can get confusing, learn compounds that they appear in. For example, don't learn guo (country) by itself. Learn names of countries that contain guo: Zhongguo, Meiguo, Faguo, Eguo, Deguo, etc. Copy them over and over. Then come back the next day and see if you can write them from the pinyin. Do the same with your reading selections. Write them out in pinyin, and then the next day, come back and try to turn them back into characters. It's an awful lot of work, but it is very effective. |
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Lars
Newbie ![]() Joined: 06 June 2008 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 2 |
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For those of you who are working through the FSI Mandarin Chinese course and want to learn how to recognize and write the characters, I suggest you check out this post on Language Log:
There is a new Chinese newspaper produced specifically for people learning the language: all characters have their equivalents written out in Pinyin. The linguist who wrote this post said that if you use this method you need not write out every character dozens of times in order to learn them.
Hope this helps.
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Lars
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lucvileyn
Newbie ![]() Joined: 08 December 2006 Location: Belgium Online Status: Offline Posts: 16 |
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I'm working on the optional modules transcribing the dialogues to characters (in collaboration with a Chinese teacher).
For all those who did pimsleur (mandarin III) before fsi, I have transcriptions in simplified and traditional Chinese, also a writing dictionary.
Feel free to take a look and comment (files are in pdf).
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Ivan Zimmer
Newbie ![]() Joined: 29 July 2008 Location: Taiwan Online Status: Offline Posts: 8 |
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In learning Japanese and Chinese people seem to be so afraid of reading and writing, the aversion to Chinese characters is unnecessary and unfortunate. I studied "Chinese by myself, and got a B.A. in Chinese Literature from a National University in Taiwan, I also have an M.A. in teaching Chinese as a second/foreign language. So I'll share some experience with you:
1. Work on your oral and listening skills from the beginning--tone and pronunciation. 2. Utilize materials: Mainland China and Taiwan have many excellent textbooks for learning Chinese with many audio files. Use these texts because they are written in Chinese characters and pinyin is kept at a minimum---put writing---reading --speaking and listening together---synthesize it! 3. Chinese books and newspapers are everywhere--pick them up and read them, keep your dictionary handy and enjoy---don't worry about not understanding--that will come in time with study and experience. When you read, read out laous, this will become a memory aid and an oral/aural crutch to the graphical representation of Chinese---you'll be able to memorize characters better. 4. If you have a Chinese class, always write sentences, articles and essays in Chinese and ask your teacher for corrections. If your teacher refuses, that teacher is a hack and shouldn't be teaching! Send your essays to me, I'll correct them for you! ![]() 5.Watch Chinese TV stations or programs, they usually have Chinese subtitles. That is another combined exercise that is also alot of fun! 6. Read Chinese characters and only Chinese characters---in this way you will become familiar with them . Also engage in meaningful writing activities, such as witting letters to Chinese friends, chatting online, witting essays, poems, advertisements etc. In this way you will improve very quickly. 7. You must do all of the above if you want to take HSK (Hanyu Shuiping Kao漢語水平靠)or TOP Huayu (Test of Proficiency Huayu華語能力測驗)at any level. Good luck on your studies--加油!祝大家的中文學習順利! ![]() |
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rockyanw
Newbie ![]() Joined: 27 August 2008 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 2 |
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with all due respect, ”Hanyu Shuiping Kao“ should be "汉语水平考(not ”靠“)"
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