2. About Chinese, and China
China-World’s most populated country
(1,338,299,500 people)
Chinese-Not a single language. (Many dialects)
All Chinese dialects are spoken differently, but use
the same characters.
We will be learning Mandarin Chinese, which is the
most spoken dialect, and the most spoken first
language in the world. (836 million speakers)
Chinese isn’t difficult, IT’S JUST DIFFERENT!
3. About Chinese Characters
Chinese is written with a system of symbols or characters,
instead of an alphabet like English
There are around 50,000 characters total, used to write
Chinese, however many of these are ancient, and no longer
used, and many are created by companies for a specific
purpose, and are also rarely used.
Around 2,000 characters are needed for basic proficiency.
A well educated adult is expected to know 5,000-10,000
characters.
There are two basic types of Chinese characters used today,
traditional and simplified. They are each used in different
areas. In the Chinese program, you will be taught simplified
characters.
There are advantages to both. Simplified characters are much
easier to write, though traditional characters are more
pictographic.
5. Chinese Character Development
Every Chinese Character, can trace it’s history back
to a pictograph from ancient China
Shan (mountain)
Knowing the original pictograph can be a great strategy for remembering Chinese
characters
6. Other types of Chinese characters.
Radicals-Radicals are part of a character, and are used to
symbolize an entire category of words. Often radicals are
combined with a component that shows pronunciation.
=Speech Radical
Ex. 说话语
=Water radical
Ex. 汁冰游泳
Ex. 妈, ma = mother. This character contains the component 女,
which means female, and the component 马, which is
pronounced ma.
Abstract Characters - Some characters are abstractly
represented, or symbolized.
Ex. 一二三 =1,2,3,or 上 and 下=, above and below
Combinations- Sometimes certain simple characters combine,
and also combine their meanings.
Ex. 明=Sun+moon (Bright) , or 森=tree + tree + tree (forest)
休, rest- 人, (man) + 术, tree
7. Tones
Tones are used in Chinese, and many other
languages, but not in English. When using tones, we
pronounce the word the same, but change the way
we inflect it.
There are four tones in Chinese
High tone 妈-ma (mother)
Rising Tone 麻-ma (rough)
Low Tone 马-ma (horse)
Falling Tone 骂-ma (scold)
8. Pinyin
Pinyin is the Chinese romanization system, or how we write
Chinese with English letters.
In the beginning of the Chinese program we will be using a lot
of pinyin, along with characters, before more characters are
introduced.
There are a very limited number of Pinyin syllables
Pinyin is also used for typing Chinese on the computer.
When writing pinyin, tone marks are also often used.
There are a very limited number of syllables in Chinese,
(around 400). If you multiply this by 4, for the tones, you get a
little over 1200 syllables, which is a very small number
considering this is an entire language.
This means many syllables have multiple meanings.
It is preferred to use characters, because each character only
has one meaning.
9.
10. Sentence Structure
The Chinese sentence structure is very different from
that of English.
我今天早上十点,去图书馆看书跟我妈妈。
I today morning ten o’clock, go library look books, with
my mom.
The sentence structure is also very simple compared
to English in many cases. Chinese has very few
extra words.
我要去上点。This literally means, I want go store. If we
wanted to say this in English, It would read I want to
go to the store. There are a lot of small extra words
in that sentence that aren’t used in Chinese.
11. Thank You For Watching!
感谢你的收看!
We hope you will take Chinese with us next year at Bethlehem
Central Middle School.
你们明年应该上中文课!