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No Grammar Blues With Regard To Chinese LanguageSubmitted by dancinghorse85@gmail.com Thu, 2 Apr 2009
Is Chinese really that hard to learn as a foreign language?
To speak the truth, not at all. Chinese grammar, if compared with the grammar of European languages, is much simpler. According to complaints heard sometimes from English speakers, Chinese is a smooth language with no problems whatsoever with grammar whereas there is problem with the grammar of other languages like Spanish (masculine and feminine genders, verb conjugations, etc). Form of each word is fixed and single: no prefixes and suffixes are there to verbs to show the tense or the person, number, or gender of the subject. Nouns do not take prefixes or suffixes showing their number or their case. I do not mean that Chinese has no grammar; What I want to say is Chinese grammar is primarily concerned with arrangement of words to form meaningful sentences as they inflectional morphology. Plus each Chinese character pronounced in one syllable, that's why when watching Chinese movies, you find that a few words can be translated into a syllable mapping in the English subtitle. Perhaps, you would tell that you are not too convinced with the above. Fine, I have another supportive and authoritative evident for you. Two days ago I luckily ran into a piece of exalting news when reading Beijing Times. Less than 1,000 Chinese characters allow you to read 90% of the current Chinese publication, according to a survey conducted by the Education Ministry and Language Commission of China. The findings of this survey is claimed to be based on 900 million characters used in more than 8.9 million files chosen from newspapers, magazines, the Internet and television. You are required to know about 900 of around 50,000 individual characters that are made up of Written Chinese to under 90 percent of the content of the publications, as the Chinese media is using fewer characters these days. On the other hand, how many words are there in English? Almost 100,000 and it's still on the rise. Many characters in Chinese language are archaic and some of them are found only once in the whole history of the written language, as these represent chiefly the meaning and not pronunciation, unlike English words . What is known to an average Chinese graduate may be only 6,000. Now, would those all above relieve you a little bit in your Chinese language study? Hope so, but do not misinterpret this. I am not in any intention to convince you that Chinese is very easy to learn or other languages like English are much harder. What I mean is that Chinese is not as difficult as you imagined or heard about, but different from your mother tongue, but difference does not mean tough necessarily, Isn’t it?What it means is that Chinese is certainly simpler than you imagined or heard about, it’s just very dissimilar from your mother tongue, but dissimilar does not mean difficult necessarily, Doesn’t it? And that hard Chinese idea won't be of any help in your study. Believe in yourself, the language is certainly not that tough to learn once that fear factor is overpowered. Good luck with your Chinese language study.
This article explicates around chinese learning, chinese language, speaking chinese with the support of valuable tips and ideas. It gives viable solutions to learn and understand the importance of chinese language and each of these tips and ideas are very effective.
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