Traditional chinese charaters : a translingual writing system /
Material type:
TextPublication details: [Place of publication not identified] : Emmanuel Ternon, 2019.Description: 222 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm 6 x 0.53 x 9 inchesISBN: - 9781729164471
- REF 495.111 T27
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| REFERENCE BOOKS | LAPULAPU-CEBU INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE REFERENCE SECTION | REF 495.111 T27 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 001867 |
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| REF 495.1 Sh23 Learn Chinese through English / | REF 495.107 N22 2019 Technology-enhanced teaching and learning of Chinese as a foreign language / | REF 495.111 L61 Beginning Mandarin Chinese characters : learn 300 characters and 1200 Chinese words through interactive activities and exercises / | REF 495.111 T27 2019 Traditional chinese charaters : a translingual writing system / | REF 495.15 B81 Complete modern Chinese Grammar / | REF 495.15 B81 Complete modern Chinese Grammar / | REF 495.15 B81 Complete modern Chinese grammar questions and answers / |
"Chinese characters are a fascinating writing system. As humanity’s last logographic script still in widespread use today, they constitute a precious part of the cultural heritage of the so-called Sinosphere, the region of the world made up of the various nations using Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese as their official languages. Chinese characters once served as part of the writing systems of these four languages, enabling a person literate in one language to read a large number of written words in the other three. However, Chinese characters have suffered a great deal of damage in recent history due to language reforms that either simplified these characters (in Chinese and Japanese) or removed them from the language’s writing system altogether (in Korean and Vietnamese). These reforms have not only made East Asian people less capable of understanding their own languages but also severely reduced cross-cultural communication between the various nations of the Sinosphere. In this book, we examine how the damage caused by Chinese character simplification and elimination reforms can be reversed by re-adopting traditional (i.e. non-simplified) Chinese characters into the writing systems of all languages of the Sinosphere. Doing this would not only enable users of Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese to better understand their own languages, but also have the potential to help East Asian people reconnect with their common cultural heritage"-- Amazon
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