The First 100 Chinese Characters: Traditional Character Edition. Laurence Matthews

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The First 100 Chinese Characters: Traditional Character Edition - Laurence Matthews

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       期 qī

       早 zǎo

       上 shàng

       下 xià

       午 wǔ

       吃 chī

       晚 wǎn

       飯 fàn

       了 le/liǎo

       哪 nǎ/něi

       Hanyu Pinyin Index

       Radical Index

       English–Chinese Index

       List of Radicals

      Introduction

      Learning the characters is one of the most fascinating and fun parts of learning Chinese, and people are often surprised by how much they enjoy being able to recognize them and to write them. Added to that, writing the characters is also the best way of learning them. This book shows you how to write the second 100 most common characters and gives you plenty of space to practice writing them. When you do this, you’ll be learning a writing system which is one of the oldest in the world and is now used by more than a billion people around the globe every day.

      In this introduction we’ll talk about:

      • how the characters developed;

      • the difference between traditional and simplified forms of the characters;

      • what the “radicals” are and why they’re useful;

      • how to count the writing strokes used to form each character;

      • how to look up the characters in a dictionary;

      • how words are created by joining two characters together; and, most importantly;

      • how to write the characters!

      Also, in case you’re using this book on your own without a teacher, we’ll tell you how to get the most out of using it.

      Chinese characters are not nearly as strange and complicated as people seem to think. They’re actually no more mysterious than musical notation, which most people can master in only a few months. So there’s really nothing to be scared of or worried about: everyone can learn them—it just requires a bit of patience and perseverance. There are also some things which you may have heard about writing Chinese characters that aren’t true. In particular, you don’t need to use a special brush to write them (a ball-point pen is fine), and you don’t need to be good at drawing (in fact you don’t even need to have neat handwriting, although it helps!).

      How many characters are there?

      Thousands! You would probably need to know something like two thousand to be able to read Chinese newspapers and books, but you don’t need anything like that number to read a menu, go shopping or read simple street signs and instructions. Just as you can get by in most countries knowing about a hundred words of the local language, so too you can get by in China quite well knowing a hundred common Chinese characters. And this would also be an excellent basis for learning to read and write Chinese.

      How did the characters originally develop?

      Chinese characters started out as pictures representing simple objects, and the first characters originally resembled the things they represented. For example:

      Some other simple characters were pictures of “ideas”:

      Some of these characters kept this “pictographic” or “ideographic” quality about them, but others were gradually modified or abbreviated until many of them now look nothing like the original objects or ideas.

      Then, as words were needed for things which weren’t easy to draw, existing characters were “combined” to create new characters. For example, 女 (meaning “woman”) combined with 子 (meaning “child”) gives a new character 好 (which means “good” or “to be fond of ”).

      Notice that when two characters are joined together like this to form a new character, they get squashed together and deformed slightly. This is so that the new, combined character will fit into the same size square or “box” as each of the original two characters. For example the character 曰 “sun” becomes thinner when it is the left-hand part of the character 時 “time”; and it becomes shorter when it is the upper part of the character 星 “star”. Some components got distorted and deformed even more than this in the combining process: for example when the character 人 “man” appears on the left-hand side of a complex character it gets compressed into イ, like in the character 他 “he”.

      So you can see that some of the simpler characters often act as basic “building blocks” from which more complex characters are formed. This means that if you learn how to write these simple characters you’ll also be learning how to write some complex ones too.

      How are characters read and pronounced?

      The pronunciations in this workbook refer to modern standard Chinese. This is the official language of China and is also known as “Mandarin” or “putonghua”.

      The pronunciation of Chinese characters is written out with letters of the alphabet using a romanization system called “Hanyu Pinyin”—or “pinyin” for short. This is the modern system used in China. In pinyin some of the letters have a different sound than in English—but if you are learning Chinese you’ll already know this. We could give a description here of how to pronounce each sound, but it would take up a lot of space—and this workbook is about writing the characters, not pronouncing them! In any case, you really need to hear a teacher (or recording) pronounce the sounds out loud to get an accurate idea of what they sound like.

      Each Chinese character is pronounced using only one syllable. However, in addition to the syllable, each character also has a particular tone, which refers to how the pitch of the voice is used. In standard Chinese there are four

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