Added: 3 years ago
From: eHow
Views: 5,944
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (25)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • @newwarsovereign Recently I went to an open day on a college and participated in a Chinese lesson. But I am still doubting between learning Chinese or Japanese :S They sound quite differently so I'm not sure which to choose. First I was for Japanese, but I bought a book to learn some Chinese and now I'm for studying Chinese. And I love the sentence constructions and grammar, in opposite to all the hard western languages..

  • @Icaurs389 As I know, Japanese is also full of grammatical rules that require much effort to digest. If you want to get rid of the rigid rules as in western languages, I would recommend Chinese. I guarantee you will not regret once you master the language, due to the sophisticated cultural values it contains and the freedom of the usage of the language.

    But the premise is that you are confident to cope with the most complicated writing system existing in the world today.

  • @Icaurs389 And if you are free and able enough, learn Cantonese with Mandarin would be even better, as Cantonese has kept many ancient features in vocabularies and tones, with almost undeniably most developed, advanced and abundant foul language system among the languages worldwide. But I can say it is at least 5 times harder than Mandarin to reach similar levels.

  • coooool

  • Why don't the Chinese people use something like an alphabet? It would be so much easier to learn an alphabet than to learn thousand of complicated characters. Because if someone who is better educated than you writes a letter to you it could be highly possible that you just can't read some (critical?) parts of it, right? And also if they use a system like us they wouldn't waste so much time on just learning the characters, writing and perhaps reading them.

    So I think it is quite inefficient

  • @Icaurs389 The complicated characters express various meanings, even in a single word. The complexity wins the language an advantage, of its conciseness. When a Chinese character use same size as Latin letters, it requires approximately 60~70% length (orally also) as English. Maybe even 30~40% for ancient Chinese. But an alphabet which only represents sounds is impossible to support such conciseness, and leads to ambiguity in comprehension. If I use Chinese now, more content can be expressed.

  • @Icaurs389 石室詩士施氏,嗜獅,誓食十獅。施氏時時適市視獅。十時,適十獅­適市。

    All the single words above sound as 'shi' in mandarin, with slight difference in 'tones'.

    In English, 'A poet "Shi" in a stone room likes lions, swears to eat ten lions. Shi frequently goes to see lions in market. In ten o'clock, coincidentally there are ten lions arrived in the market.' Much more clumpsy, and impossible to express it if Chinese becomes alphabet.

  • @newwarsovereign Wow, it sounds hugely complicated but you are true about it's possibilties. And I learned there are some regularities in the chinese writing.

  • @Icaurs389 Of course there are regularities, otherwise it would be impossible to learn 3000 daily used words thorougly, not to mention the words out of the scope for the use of literature or academic purposes. Of course, maybe at least 100 words had to be remembered without any attempts to find shortcuts. But then, the shape of many words can be guessed by how they sound like, and vice versa. Of course, not 100% accuracy, but that's how most Chinese kids learn the language.

  • this is gr8! thanks for sharing!

  • How long it takes to write 140 characters?

  • @MrAirgunlover Sure, send me a message. I'll give it a shot.

  • Very interesting. And I was wondering something, in China, how would they use a keyboard? I know they woulden't use the one's we use, but what would be on the keys?

  • @americanoxford Like the keys would be just the same, but when they type the letters it will convert into their language.

  • wow, very boring video.

  • @overthehill91 Then please don't watch.

  • @Sunsetmello Gladly.

  • aaaaa

  • cool.... so hard to do

  • Chinese characters or words are not called "symbols."

  • wow good job ^_^

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more