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Visible Speech is an attempt to set the record straight about the
nature of writing. John DeFrancis, a noted specialist in the
Chinese language, shows that writing can be based only upon a sound
system and not upon any other linguistic level. He corrects the
erroneous views of Chinese writing as pictographic, ideographic,
logographic, or morphemic, and defends his conclusion that because
of these misrepresentations, the nature of all writing continues to
be misunderstood. Using the writing systems of Sumerian, Egyptian,
Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Greek, Mayan, and English, among others,
to illustrate his points, Dr. DeFrancis stresses their basic
identity as representatives of visible speech, while noting their
secondary differences as manifested in their diverse script forms.
He proposes a new classification of writing systems based on this
theme of diversity and oneness, and makes an impassioned case for
the essential phonetic component of all writing. This book reflects
the author's sound scholarship and novel insights, which place it
in the forefront with such classics on writing as those by Gelb,
Diringer, Cohen, Fevrier, and Jensen. The readable style aims at a
general audience interested in understanding the nature of the
symbols that first strike the eye, while the academic research
involved makes it an indispensable work for scholars in the many
fields related to language and linguistics.
This second edition, like the earlier first edition, introduces
some of the main varieties of Chinese as found before and after the
establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949. While
continuing to stress the basic importance of the traditional
usages, such as the regular characters to be found in all materials
published before the adoption of the simplified forms in 1956 and
still in use in some areas, the present revision goes further in
contrasting variant usages and in providing additional material
relevant to the PRC. Closely related with the author's Beginning
Chinese and its companion volume, Character Text for Beginning
Chinese, this text is based on a new approach which not only takes
into account the advantages of the oral-aural method but gets the
student more quickly into material that he is likely to encounter
in actual written Chinese. Unique features are the emphasis on
compounds and their extensive use in various types of exercises.
The 1,200 combinations are based on 400 characters; in all, the
book contains 120,000 characters of running text. All compounds
appear in illustrative sentences accompanied by English
translations, in dialogues as a means of audio-lingual
reinforcement, and in narrative or expository form. Additional
exercises include maps, booksellers' book lists, correspondence,
poems, table of contents, and brief passages from the works of
outstanding writers such as Sun Yatsen, Hu Shih, Mao Tse-tung, and
Lu Hsun. Supplementary lessons present reading material using the
simplified characters adopted in mainland China. To suit the needs
of the beginner, characters are introduced in large size, and
tables indicate the sequence of strokes used in their formation. In
addition to a pinyin index, there are three summary charts in which
the characters are arranged by lesson, by number of strokes, and by
radical. A fourth chart contrasts regular and simplified
characters; a fifth chart presents variant forms of the same
character. Because of the large characters and extensive material,
the book is issued in two volumes, Part I and Part II. This work
was supported by a contract with the United States Office of
Education.
A complete revision of the first volume in the Yale Linguistic
Series, this new version, in "pinyin" romanization, and aimed at
secondary school and college levels, is an introduction to spoken
Chinese. It includes dialogues, pronunciation drills,
sentence-building exercises, examples of characters, substitution
drills, and miscellaneous exercises in the form of games like
crossword puzzles. There is a combined glossary-index,
supplementary vocabulary for each lesson, notes, and a detailed
suggested study guide. John De Francis is research professor of
Chinese at Seton Hall University. Yale Linguistics Series, 1. The
features of this introductory text for learning the Chinese
language include: -Pinyin romanization-Vocabulary of 600
items-Pronunciation drills, dialogues, sentence-building exercises,
pattern drills, substitution tables, games and other learning aids,
memorization exercises, and a combined glossary-index-No characters
are used
This dictionary is an expansion of the ground-breaking ABC
Chinese-English Dictionary, the first strictly alphabetically
ordered and Pinyin computerized dictionary. It contains over
196,000 entries, compared to the 71,486 entries of the earlier
work, making it the most comprehensive one-volume dictionary of
Chinese. The single-sort alphabetic order of the entries provides
by far the simplest and fastest way to look up a term whose
pronunciation is known. Radical charts help locate characters when
the pronunciation of a term is not known and facilitate access to
traditional, simplified, and variant forms of characters. Other
distinctive features of this dictionary include: information on
whether a character is free form, sometimes bound, or always bound;
traditional character equivalents for preceding simplified
characters for each entry where appropriate; measure words for
particular nouns; data from both the PRC and Taiwan indicating the
relative frequency of entries that are complete or partial
homographs; unique one-to-one correspondence between transcription
and characters that permits calling up on a computer the characters
of any entry by simply typing the corresponding transcription.
This second edition, like the earlier first edition, introduces
some of the main varieties of Chinese as found before and after the
establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949. While
continuing to stress the basic importance of the traditional
usages, such as the regular characters to be found in all materials
published before the adoption of the simplified forms in 1956 and
still in use in some areas, the present revision goes further in
contrasting variant usages and in providing additional material
relevant to the PRC.Closely related with the author's Beginning
Chinese and its companion volume, Character Text for Beginning
Chinese, this text is based on a new approach which not only takes
into account the advantages of the oral-aural method but gets the
student more quickly into material that he is likely to encounter
in actual written Chinese. Unique features are the emphasis on
compounds and their extensive use in various types of exercises.
The 1,200 combinations are based on 400 characters; in all, the
book contains 120,000 characters of running text. All compounds
appear in illustrative sentences accompnied by English
translations, in dialogues as a means of audio-lingual
reinforcement, and in narrative or expository form. Additional
exercises include maps, booksellers' book lists, correspondence,
poems, table of contents, and brief passages from the works of
outstanding writers such as Sun Yatsen, Hu Shih, Mao Tse-tung, and
Lu Hsun. Supplementary lessons present reading material using the
simiplified characters adopted in mainland China.To suit the needs
of the beginner, characters are introduced in large size, and
tables indicate the sequence of strokes used in their formation. In
addition to a pinyin index, there are three summary charts in which
the characters are arranged by lesson, by number of strokes, and by
radical. A fourth chart contrasts regular and simplified
characters; a fifth chart presents variant forms of the same
chracter. Because of the large characters and extensive material,
the book is issued in two volumes, Part I and Part II. This work
was supported by a contract with the United States Office of
Education.This is the paper copy version of this text.
Students and teachers will welcome this new addition to the
DeFrancis series of Chinese language texts. The famous little red
book of Mao Tse-tung's thoughts contains basic ideas that permeate
virtually all discussion in China of a wide range of topics - war
and peace, socialism and communism, culture and art, women and
youth, study and education, politics and government, economics and
philosophy, morality and ethics, and so on. The Annotated
Quotations provides the original Chinese text together with a
complete pinyin transcription. The annotation includes regular
characters, simplified forms, pinyin transcription, and English
definitions. Structural notes are provided for passages of special
difficulty. A cumulative glossary of first occurrences of all
characters and vocabulary items not in the Index Volume to the
DeFrancis series concludes the work. From the point of view of
language teaching, an important feature of Chairman Mao's book is
that its didactic objective has resulted in precisely the kind of
repetition and review that textbook writers work hard to achieve.
Furthermore, his writing style is generally simple and clear, and
there are few extremely rare characters. For students at various
levels of language competence starting at the level of DeFrancis's
Beginning Chinese Reader, Part II, the Annotated Quotations
provides an excellent introduction to the vast body of materials
published in the People's Republic of China.
A sequel to Beginning Chinese Reader and Intermediate Chinese
Reader, this text, the eleventh in a series produced under the
auspices of Seton Hall University, is closely correlated with the
author's Advanced Chinese and Character Text for Advanced Chinese.
It contains 400 new characters, some 3,000 compounds, and about
20,000 characters of running text. All compounds appear in
illustrative sentences and in narrative or expository materials,
including adaptations of articles and stories by Chinese authors.
Supplementary lessons present reading material using the simplified
characters adopted in mainland China. A stroke-order chart is
provided for characters that students might find difficult to
write. In addition to a pinyin index, there are three summary
charts in which the characters are arranged by lesson, by number of
strokes, and by radical. A fourth chart contrasts regular and
simplified characters; a fifth chart shows the differences between
two typefaces; and a sixth chart presents variant forms of the same
character. This series has been supported by contract with the
United States Office of Education.Mr. DeFrancis is professor of
Chinese at the University of Hawaii.
A sequel to Beginning Chinese Reader, this text is closely
correlated with the author's Beginning Chinese, Advanced Chinese,
and the character versions of these two texts. It contains 400 new
characters, some 2,500 compounds, and about 200,000 characters of
running text. All compounds appear in illustrative sentences, in
dialogues, and in narrative or expository form. Supplementary
lessons, summary charts, indexes, and other aids follow the general
pattern of those in Beginning Chinese Reader. This work was
supported by a contract with the U.S. Office of Education. Yale
Linguistic Series.Mr. DeFrancis, research professor of Chinese at
Seton Hall University, is visiting professor of Chinese at the
University of Hawaii.
The general approach in writing this text is the same as that in
Beginning Chinese Reader. It is discussed in some detail in the
introduction to that work. Salient features include:1) Selection of
characters on the basis of frequency;2) Provision of a large number
of compounds and a large amount of reading matter relative to the
number of characters;3) Inclusion of dialogue material in order to
provide students with audiolingual support of what they read;4)
Close correlation with Beginning Chinese, Advanced Chinese, and the
character versions of these two texts.The present volume contains
400 characters, some 2,500 compounds, and about 200,000 characters
of running text. Published for Seton Hall University. With the
assistance of Ten Chia-yee and Yung Chih-Sheng.
This character version of "Advanced Chinese" contains also pinyin
transcriptions of infrequently used characters at each occurrence.
Both texts were supported by the U.S. Office of Education. Yale
Linguistic Series.
Designed to be used after either "Beginning "or "Intermediate
Chinese," this work is based on recordings of twenty lectures on
academic topics in pinyin Romanization. The new material in each
lesson is presented in illustrative sentences and dialogues between
student and teacher. Additional material includes grammar drills,
review exercises, questions, recapitulations of the lectures, and
notes, plus 45 illustrations, a combined glossary, and an index.
Yale Linguistics Series.John DeFrancis is research professor of
Chinese at Seton Hall University.
In this parallel character version of Intermediate Chinese,
dialogues, pronunciation drills, sentence-building exercises,
substitution drills and memorization exercises correspond to the
same lessons Intermediate Chinese offers in English and in pinyin
romanization of Mandarin. Published for Seton Hall University
This text is the second in a series of three closely integrated
volumes of spoken Chinese for use at the high-school and college
levels. Intermediate Chinese presents dialogues on everyday topics
together with analysis of anticipated points of difficulty for the
student and numerous sentences illustrating the usage of all new
words and grammar.The book consists of four units, with six lessons
each. The first five lessons of each unit contain new material; the
sixth reviews the preceding five. The review lessons contain a
variety of drills, with no two lessons having exactly the same
types of exercises. All the main lessons, however, contain the
following divisions:-Dialogues (in Chinese)-Sentences for New Words
and Grammar (in Chinese)-Review Sentences (in Chinese)-Monologue
(in Chinese)-Questions (in Chinese)-Dialogue (English
translation)-Sentences for New Words and Grammar (English
translation)-Review Sentences (English translation)-Notes (in
English) Like its predecessor, Beginning Chinese, this work is
aimed at secondary school and college levels. In pinyin
romanization, the dialogue-form lessons are supplemented by
exercises, notes, and a combined glossary and index covering all
the new tiems introduced in the dialogues. The first two lessons
review all of Beginning Chinese, and every sixth lesson is a
thorough review of the preceding five. A hundred illustrations
compliment the text. Mr. DeFrancis, research professor of Chinese
at Seton Hall University, compiled Intermediate Chinese under
contract with the U.S. Office of Education. Yale Linguistic Series,
7. Previously announced. Published for Seton Hall University
Buch, zuweilen humorvoll und geradezu spannend zu lesen, ist im
sprachlichen Duktus bewusst offen gehalten fur alle moglichen
Leser, Laien wie Experten. Zwanzig Jahre nach seiner
Erstveroffentlichung wird es einen postmodern geschulten Linguisten
zumindest wissenschaftsgeschichtlich interessieren. Dem
nicht-linguistischen Sinologen sowie allen anderen, die sich mehr
wunschen als bloss oberflachliche Einblicke in die Besonderheit und
Problematik der chinesischen Sprache und Schrift, deren kulturelle
und politische Bedeutung, sei dieses Buch warmstens empfohlen."
Gudula Linck in Internationales Asienforum Aus dem Inhalt I. Die
chinesische Sprache 1. Zur Definition von "Chinesisch" und
"Sprache" 2. Grund-legende Fakten zum gesprochenen Chinesisch 3.
Idiolekte, Dialekte, Regiolekte und Sprachen II. Die chinesische
Schrift 4. Was Namen besagen 5. Piktographe - und dann? 6. Wie
geben chinesische Schriftzeichen Laute wieder? 7. Wie vermitteln
chinesische Schriftzeichen Bedeutung? III. Entmythologisierung der
chinesischen Schriftzeichen 8. Der Mythos der Ideographie 9. Der
Mythos der Universalitat 10. Der Mythos der Nachahmbarkeit 11. Der
Mythos der Einsilbigkeit 12. Der Mythos der Unentbehrlichkeit 13.
Der Erfolgsmythos IV. Die chinesische Sprachreform 14. Die
Sprachreform 15. Die Schriftreform V. Anhang Glossar;
Bibliographie; Nachbemerkung zur deutschen Ausgabe; Index
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