Posts Tagged ‘learning Chinese’

Tips to Learn Chinese

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Here are some tips on learning Chinese or Mandarin taken from http:// www.wikihow.com/ Learn-Mandarin-Chinese:

  1. Start small. Don’t push yourself to do too much. Purchase some books from a bookstore to teach yourself the basics. If you can, contact a friend who lives in China, and they can get really good books from there.
  2. Test yourself and have others test you. But remember, this isn’t an exam; it’s helping you become fluent in Chinese.
  3. Find opportunities to practice what you learn. Maybe there’s a Chinese restaurant down the road. If there are Chinese people there, order, and greet them in Chinese! If you can’t find any, go to Chinatown. Maybe one of your neighbors speaks Chinese. Make sure they speak Mandarin, though, or it could mean a very embarrassing visit!
  4. Don’t be too harsh on yourself. Learning a language is a gradual process – you have to keep at it. Chinese in one of the hardest languages to learn, so take your time.
  5. If all self-teaching attempts fail, try taking a class in Chinese. With the growth of Asian neighborhoods around the country, many classes taught by volunteers have popped up. They range in cost from $300 to $500 or more per year, plus other costs.
  6. Know your best way to learn. Do you learn best by rewriting phrases? Rereading? Saying them out aloud? Hearing them said aloud? If you are not sure, practice differently with new unique ways to help you remember.
  7. Rewrite every phase or word on the page. This will help – as you can always refer to it if you have trouble.
  8. Learn the tones. There are four tones. One type of tone is usually over each Chinese word. Each tone type is drawn over the word ‘ma’ to show the different ways of pronouncing it.
    • The first tone is a high, flat tone. Your voice stays flat, with no rise or dip in the way it sounds.
    • The second tone is a rising tone. Your voice rises when you say this, sort of as if you were asking someone to repeat something by saying “huh?” or “what?”
    • The third tone is a dipping tone. The way you say the word goes down then up. Such as when you say the letter “B”.
    • The fourth tone is a lowering tone. Just say the whole word as if your voice is becoming more manly, or as if you’re reading a book and have come across something new and interesting and are saying “huh”. Easy enough? If not, don’t fret. It’s definitely recommended to hear the tones demonstrated from a native speaker, since it’s hard to get an idea of what they sound like purely through text.
  9. Say hello. The Chinese say ‘Hello’ as “Ni Hao”. This is pronounced: Nee How. To pronounce this word correctly, you should use tone 3 (dip and rise) for Ni and for Hao as well. Ni-(nee) means you, literally, in Chinese, and Hao (how) means good. So they are basically saying “You are good”, but in Mandarin it is interpreted as “Hello!” (There is a technicality in that when one has two third-tone sounds such as “Ni hao”, the first is changed to a second tone (rising). Thus, Ni hao, has a rising, falling/rising tones. This is one of several tone sandhi’s or rules for alteration of tones in Mandarin.

Learn Chinese

Sunday, September 7th, 2008

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Welcome !

When my son was in preschool, he studied in a school where Chinese Mandarin was taught as another language. I was so amazed by the way young children learned the Chinese language and I just wondered if adults like me would be have the concentration,  flexibility and comprehension to learn it as well. I discovered, though that learning Chinese Mandarin isn’t as complicated as it seems to be. In fact, it’s quite fun!

Learning the language both orally and written is a challenging task. The Chinese language is conposed of many complex characters that represent both sound and meaning. It is written in Chinese characters called hanzi.
The modern Chinese Mandarin dictionary contains approximately 4000 to 5000 characters that you can memorize. That’s such enormous information to put in your brain!

But as I said, learning the Chinese language can be fun, and that’s what you’ll discover in the succeeding blog posts…