Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Speak Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Arghhh tones! Ranting and questions...

Thread: Arghhh tones! Ranting and questions...
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carlo

Join Date: Jul 2004

Location: Beijing

Posts: 344

Have I said this already? Those of you who are studying in China should check

汉语语音教程, by 曹文, BLCU (ISBN: 7-5619-1057-6).

which is up to now the best I've seen. From easy to advanced, in one book.

The problem with tones is that they are usually not taught well, so it's easy to reinforce bad
habits through practice. The interaction between stress, rhythm (prosody) sentence intonation and
tones in Chinese hasn't been fully worked out, and recent research developments haven't reached
textbooks for foreign learners yet. A great place to start is the home page of one of the gurus in
the field, Prof. Shen Jiong at Beijing Uni (http://chinese.pku.edu.cn/yuyinyj/shenjiong.htm),
which is also a contributor on 北大中文论坛。Note his one paper in English.

As any non-native speaker of English will tell you, it's as difficult to develop a reasonable
approximation of English intonation (complete with primary and secondary stresses) as it is to
master Chinese tones in connected speech. Some people put a lot of effort into it, some people
don't, but to put it bluntly 'toneless Chinese' sounds a great deal like broken English.

There are quite a few programs out there for voice analysis that are cheaper than Voice Vista /
VoicePrint. SFS Speech Filing System has a weird interface (like Praat) but it's quite powerful,
and free. Wavesurfer is also free, and easy to use. My current favourite is Speech Analyzer, by
SIL: very stable and versatile. The full version sells for about US$20 IIRC.

carlo
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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 16th April 2008, 04:37 PM

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favicon

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Posted By gougou

回复: favicon

Works fine here.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 28th November 2007, 08:24 AM

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favicon

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Posted By gougou

Re: favicon

At home, I cleared my cache and it showed up right away. At work, I did nothing and it showed up
automatically after a while.

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 22nd April 2008, 09:23 PM

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how to make gelato?

Views: 464

Posted By yonglin

Re: how to make gelato?

This is why they make ice-cream machines. If you don't stir the ice cream to break the ice
crystals during the freezing process, they will remain (large) in the final product. By stirring,
you break...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 23rd June 2006, 07:15 PM

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What other languages do we speak

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Posted By Roee

As far as I'm concerned the one million dollar...

As far as I'm concerned the one million dollar question is: how do you maintain language skills
when there are several languages involved.

Some have natural abilities to retain even 10 or 20...

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Chinese Studies - 高考 mock exams for English and Chinese - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Resources and General Study Issues

高考 mock exams for English and Chinese
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xiaocai -

Gao Kao is just a tool to control the number of students getting tertiary education in China,
simply because we don't have enough resource. I know it's very sad and we should let everyone who
wants to and is able to complete an university degree to at least have a try, but I don't see it
happening in recent future. As for the scaling system, I think there are more than just "the
chinese system" and "the system of other countries", and if you take the number of students taking
the entrance exam every year into account and you'll find 750 is barely enough to separate the
students out, and therefore we also have to choose there “志愿” while taking the exam, which
is just another means of restraining besides the exam itself.

I think it is part of Chinese culture that almost all the parents want their kids to receive a
higher education level. It's been like this for more than 1000 years and very hard to be changed,
even you know it's just a waste of already limited resources in some instances. And I think that
is another reason that why Gao Kao looks a bit too harsh sometimes.

And talking about the alternatives, of course they are not in the same level as universities, or
they'll just be universities. But as the reason mentioned above, we can't afford providing the
same level of tertiary education to everyone and hence the alternatives with lower levels.

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Chinese Online Class - CSC Scholarship Support Group - Page 17 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools

CSC Scholarship Support Group
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Yi_Se_Lie_Ren -

Well, first of all, thanks for your answers. Sorry for forgetting all the background story-
I'm a B.A student in the East Asian Department in Tel Aviv University, Israel.
This is my last year of school, and so I applied for the CSC through my school. Usually, there are
4 scholarships that are annually given by the CSC to the top students of the Chinese language
class. This year I was lucky enough (or talented enough, whatever) to get the scholarship through
an extra quota the university was given (raising the number of scholarship receiving students to .
So we've all met the Chinese consulate's education representative and he gave us some information
such as:
1. We will get dorms for free (but he didn't say what kind of dorms)
2. We will get a monthly payment (but he didn't say how much, just that it's very little)
3. We may write BLCU or Fudan, but in most cases people don't get into the quota or admitted too
late, so there's no guarantee for studying in Beijing or Shanghai
4. The answers about where we study will be given to us only by mid-July, there was no information
he could tell us about admission.
5. The scholarship covers: books, dorms, admission, medical health care. It does not cover: Flight
(ouch, there go 1,200$, luckily the dollar is on a low )
6. Other than that, he told us how to fill the forms.

I've filled up everything and handed it all to the consulate, I've had to go to the HIV clinic to
do the HIV test and pay a small donation to them, but other than that, no problems.
about the contact in China- I've filled the address and phone numbers of the Israeli embassy in
China, that's what I've been told by the Chinese consulate to fill, I guess everyone can do that
too.
After having it all finished, I guess all there is to do is to cross fingers that all will go
smoothly and I will get in one of the places I asked for.
One thing, however, still remains unsolved- What are the dates? What is the academic schedule in
China? I know it's from September to July, but can you tell me the exact dates of the semesters?
Thanks a bunch, you've helped a lot and I hope next year I can help other people who will probably
have the same questions as I've had.

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extrapages -

Quote:

One thing, however, still remains unsolved- What are the dates? What is the academic schedule in
China? I know it's from September to July, but can you tell me the exact dates of the semesters?

the dates are different for every school. but its generally from september to june.

as for everything else, you can just read the very first post for how things are usually done with
other CSC awards.

kisha -

jamoldo,
i will... however it takes... even if i have to move to new zealand (where everything seems
easier)!

ipsi() and yueni, how very fortunate of you! i still wish we had a later deadline here in the
philippines as you have.

good luck doki doki!

Yi_Se_Lie_Ren -

extrapages-
thanks for all the info! I never thought I'll find it all in one place and written so clearly.
If you know something about the exact date school starts in Fudan, please tell me because Fudan's
website doesn't say anything. Chinese internet is (still) an unexplored territory for me....

zmblum -

Hi all,

After a quick browse through the forum, I did not find what I was looking for... maybe I missed it
or maybe it's not here and someone could help me out...

I want to confirm that the MOE received my application, or at least that it reached Washington DC
on it's way. Does anyone have a contact at the CSC in Beijing or at the DC Embassy whom I could
reach on this?

Also, I found the contact page on the China Embassy's education site but all the phone numbers I
tried went straight to voicemail. The website I used was
http://www.sino-education.org/english/contactus.htm.

This is yet another example of my super anal-retentiveness but I feel the need to confirm that
they have my app and I'm hesitant to bother the nice woman at the SF consulate anymore Thanks in
advance for any help!

extrapages -

zmblum,
i dont know if the csc people will get back to you...
but ill send you the contact of the dude in charge in dc.
and he'll probably be able to confirm. though im not sure.
tell me how it goes!

zmblum -

I emailed Extrapages contact in DC. He was nice in his response but not helpful at all. He told me
to call the San Francisco consulate even I am trying to confirm from an outside source that they
did what they were supposed to (send my app to the MOE in Beijing). O well... I'll try to email
the MOE and see what they can tell me.

Thanks for the contact info Extrapages.

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Happy Birthday Chinese Forums - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Living in China

Happy Birthday Chinese Forums
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imron -

From Beijing Chinese School meetup in a long while I
figured why not combine the two.

So, bearing in mind various people's work schedules, the 24th of this month seems a pretty good
date. The location will be somewhere in Beijing however members who won't be in Beijing at the
time are also encouraged to hold their own meetups to commemorate the occasion (see the
Get-togethers, meets and events sticky for how to go about announcing your event).

A rough plan at the moment is maybe something along the lines of meeting up late afternoon for
pre-dinner drinks somewhere, followed by dinner somewhere, followed by whatever people want to do
after that, although at the moment, the plan's pretty flexible, so if anyone's got any better
suggestions, I'd love to hear them.

If you're going to be in Beijing on that date and are interested in attending, RSVP me via a PM so
I can get a rough idea of numbers. In the PM be sure to include who will be coming (in case you
want to invite your non-forum reading SO), prefered location (Wudaokou, Houhai, Chaoyang, etc) and
time, plus any other suggestions you have.

Also feel free to post your suggestions in this thread.

Sometime later next week after collating all the responses, I'll post more concrete info about
time and location.

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ipsi() -

I'd hold a meetup, but I've got a sad feeling it would be a meeting of one . Unless there' s other
people in Wellington right now that I don't know about?

simonlaing -

Yeah Happy birthday Chinese-forums.

If there are some people in Nanjing , We could meet up on the 23rd. Get some Beijing Kao ya or
some spicy Suan Cai Yu.

Give a buzz or PM if you're in town.

thanks,
SimoN

Ole -

congratulations to the birth of 23,581 children !

gougou -

I'm in. Who else in Beijing?

Quest -

Can't believe we are all 5 years older now...

Shadowdh -

I would be there but thats the night I travel to Beijing on the train, I knew I should have booked
the friday...!!!

gougou -

Quote:

I knew I should have booked the friday...!!!

Don't worry, there's still plenty of time to change your ticket.

Shadowdh -

Unfortunately not Gougou... now I have a few things to attend to that day and I get back from
Chongqing late thursday...

gougou -

That's a pity. You can always celebrate on the train though!

How about others?

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Chinese language - how to make gelato? - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Extras > Other cultures and language

how to make gelato?
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zozzen -

Quote:

There must be a correlation between learning Chinese and craving ice cream! I was spared of that
so far, but after reading those threads, I wouldn't mind one... Where about are you, zozzen?

yeah, while we come to China to learn putonghua, people there want to learn something from us. In
these days, ice-cream, tiramisu and many western desserts are FAQs by my friends in China, but i
have no ideas how to make it at all.

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zozzen -

Quote:

anyone know the cost of cream in Beijing? Um...I am bringing an ice cream maker. I can't bear to
leave it behind

you mean whipping cream?
the cheapest one is around RMB20 something per box (around 700-800ml, i guess)

bottledpoetry -

thanks!

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese School - Radiolab - Musical language - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Extras > Other cultures and language

Radiolab - Musical language
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fredrik_w -

Interesting radio show:

http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2007/09/25

" What is music? How does it work? Why does it move us? Why are some people better at it than
others? In this hour, we examine the line between language and music, how the brain processes
sound, and we meet a composer who uses computers to capture the musical DNA of dead composers in
order to create new work. We also re-imagine the disastrous 1913 debut of Stravinsky’s Rite of
Spring…through the lens of modern neurology "

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Chinese language - Panda Aspect - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Living in China > Teaching English in

China
Panda Aspect
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Wildman -

Last year I worked for this company, I was disheartened to see that their website is still up...

I heard from someone else recently that this company is still causing problems, so I decided to
tell some others about it. When I worked for them, I had only recently arrived in Beijing. I knew
little of teaching English, and they offered me a job as soon as I got here.

The job seemed great at first, and the pay was pretty good (140 yuan per hour), 20 hours per week.
The first time they were supposed to pay me however, they said they accidentally sent it to the
wrong bank card. They said they would take care of it ASAP...

I continued to work for them another 2 weeks after this, and continually called them up and asked
for the payment. They would make up excuses again and again. I finally quit the job...I couldn't
take it any more.

One day I called, and the boss there David Gao, said that he had to leave for a trip and would be
back in a few days. He said after this he would pay me....I waited during this time, and called
again after his trip. He would not answer his phone. I called the office, and one of the workers
there said that he would not pay me until I teach another 2 weeks for him. I ended up finally
giving up after countless times of begging for my pay. I got a better job, and moved on.

I am just sharing a bit of bad experience that I have had, in order for others to avoid having the
same problems as well. Just be careful around companies like this, they will screw anyone that is
naive enough to believe that they will truly get 140 yuan per hour...Believe me, you won't get a
thing!

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BrandeX -

Quote:

anyone that is naive enough to believe that they will truly get 140 yuan per hour

I don't know if you meant from just him to get 140/hr amount of money, or in general to get this
much money teaching, which it sounds a bit like you could have meant from the wording.
I rarely accept less than 150/hr for teaching/tutoring here.

Wildman -

Maybe I should have worded it differently...I just mean with this company.

I just know there's a ton of bad companies out there like this, and I wanna help nobody else make
the same mistake.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - Exchange Children - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Living in China > Classifieds

Exchange Children
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zy2008 -

Exchange Children
I am a resident of Beijing China and have a ten years old boy. He is a clever and adorable boy. He
is a student in the fourth grade. I wish him learn English, but unfortunately there is no suitable
language environment for him. If your mother tongue is English and you just have a child who likes
to learn Chinese, we can exchange our child one year, so the children can learn the language
better.
My wife and I are middle-income in Beijing and have two houses with three rooms and two parlors.
And there is a nursemaid who specially takes care of the child.
If you are interesting to hear more details, you can email me: zy.zhy2008@yahoo.com

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Chinese Class - identify this song - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Music

identify this song
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T_A_K -

could somebody download this file and identify the song? please...
http://rapidshare.com/files/100032313/remix.mp3.html

thanx

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muyongshi -

Sorry would like to help but it sounds like it was recorded off of a karaoke session and not one
word is audible!

T_A_K -

nevermind, I've found it myself. the songs name is 梦醒时分

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Chinese language - BOTM December 2007 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Resources and General Study Issues > Book of the Month

BOTM December 2007
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imron -

Anyone got any suggestions? After listening to what appears to be a heavily abridged podcast of it
here, I was thinking perhaps 每个姑娘都单纯.

It's about a young, lying, cheating, philandering bar owner and his group of friends.

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muyongshi -

I've already started reading even though I haven't finished the current book. Can't say I
particularly like but it reminds of the discussion here where ladder theory was mentioned and the
author is definitely of that school of thought.

muyongshi -

So...how is everyone doing on this? By the end I really got into it and I wound up finishing
before December came around. Does that mean I need to read it again???

I found it to be really down to earth in many ways and found the characters themselves not ever
having any pretenses.

imron -

I've been trying to find a hard-copy of the book (without much luck so far) rather than reading it
online, with the plan to read the bulk of it in-flight when I go back to Australia over Christmas.
Should be able to get it finished by the end of December

I quite liked the podcast, and am looking forward to the book as the podcast definitely gave the
impression that a lot of stuff was being left out.

imron -

Picked up a hard-copy today, but it seems to have a few differences from the version on the
web.... the first few pages seem entirely different (though later ones match up no problem).

muyongshi -

And for anyone interested you can get it here on Dangdang. I am considering getting the hard copy
as it was a decent read.

muyongshi -

Well???????? I saw you say you were still on track...how far is everyone and what do they think?

imron -

I'm not sure anyone else is reading it

muyongshi -

We got a great pattern going here you, me me, you you, me, you and since i am adding this me
again! Wow I am really bored....

imron -

Finished, and with one day to spare :-)

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Chinese Lesson - Chinese roots in other languages - Page 5 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

Chinese roots in other languages
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Page 5 of 7 First < 34 5 67 >

nnt -

道可道, 非常道. 名可名, 非常名. 無, 名天地之始; 有, 名萬物之母.

In Hán Việt:

Đạo khả đạo, phi thường đạo. Danh khả danh, phi thường danh. Vô, danh thiên
địa chi thủy, hữu, danh vạn vật chi mẫu.

(There is a variant about punctuation...and meaning: 無名, 天地之始; 有名, 萬物之母
nameless, such was the universe in the beginnings; getting names is at the origin of all things)

đ = english d
ao = english ow in "now"
ư = japanese う ơng = pinyin eng
ương = japanese う + pinyin eng

kh = pinyin k
ph = pinyin f
th = pinyin t
d = english z
an = pinyin an
ưu = japanese う + pinyin u
â = pinyin e

ch = pinyin zh
âu = pinyin ou

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nnt -

shibo77:

Could you find a reconstruction of Tang's era pronunciation of the above text? I think it would be
even more interesting than the E-zhou pronunciation (from which all variants have much evolved?).

Another idea would be the reconstitution of Tang's era pronunciation of a "regular" Tang poem
(i.e. which follows Tang's rules) and compare it with the present day pronunciations.

shibo77 -

How do I do quotes?

Find a Tang reconstruction, I'll find it! But it will have to wait awhile, ~1week, 2weeks. Sorry!

WH Baxter and many other Sinologists think that Eastern Zhou was the ancestor to all/most of the
dialects in present day China. But there is another "faction" of linguists who supports 殷商
latter half of the Shang dynasty as the ancestor. Of course, there are alot more different views
to these two. I made a small attempt to reconstruct some, I only got a few words. I don't really
study Tang Chinese. I also corrected some mistakes.

*Mid-Tang reconstruction < *Early-Han reconstruction
之*tsyi<*te

- Shibo

nnt -

I've found an interesting link (Big5 code)about William H. Baxter:

http://www.geocities.com/sgoertzen/Chinese/mcb5.htm

Quote:

李白﹐俠客行
Li Bai (LiX Baek), "Travels of a Knight-errant"

趙客縵胡纓 吳鉤霜雪明 mjaeng
銀鞍照白馬 颯沓如流星 seng
十步殺一人 千里不留行 haeng
事了拂依去 深藏身與名 mjieng
閑過信陵飲 脫劍膝前橫 hwaeng
將炙啖朱亥 持觴勸侯嬴 yeng
三盃吐然諾 五嶽倒為輕 khjieng
眼花耳熱後 意氣素霓生 srjaeng
救趙揮金槌 邯鄲先震驚 kjaeng
千秋二壯士 烜赫大粱城 dzyeng
縱死俠骨香 不慚世上英 'jaeng
誰能書閤下 白首太玄經 keng

Li Bai's rhyme words:
明 [微庚開三] ming2 (minh) < mjaeng 'bright'
星 [心青開四] xing (tinh) < seng 'star'
行 [匣庚開二] xing2 (hành) < haeng 'travel, conduct'
名 [微清開四] ming2 (danh) < mjieng 'name, fame'
橫 [匣庚合二] heng2 (hoành) < hwaeng 'horizontal, across'
嬴 [以清開四] ying (doanh) < yeng 'full, surfeit' [name]
輕 [溪清開四] qing (khinh) < khjieng 'light, trivial'
生 [生庚開二] sheng (sinh) < srjaeng 'live, grow, produce'
驚 [見庚開三] jing (kinh) < kjaeng 'startle'
城 [禪清開三] cheng2 (thành) < dzyeng 'town'
英 [影庚合三] ying (anh) < 'jaeng 'glory, hero'
經 [見青開四] jing (kinh) < keng 'canon, classic'
(I've added Hán Việt trancriptions)

Another poem from the link with transcribed rhymes:

劉方平﹐春怨

紗窗日落漸黃昏 (A23) hun1 (hôn) < xwon
金屋無人見淚痕 (A24) hen2 (ngân) < hon
寂寞空庭春欲晚 (C20) wan3 (vãn) < mjonX (C20 rhymes with A22)
梨花滿地不開門 (A23) men2 (môn) < mwon

(I've added Hán Việt trancriptions)

Middle Chinese is particularly interesting for me to compare with nowadays languages/dialects
(just for fun, I'm no linguist).
The Zhou are nearly as distant to the Tang than the latter to ourselves, so it's also interesting
to see the evolution from that time...

39degN -

Quote:

是呀!
汉语学的研究家里外国人占很大的比例.败涂地很多大都市里的人中文都挺退
化的. 哇撒! 真酷! 您牛! 我干! ...

sure, your writing is a living proof.
joking. BTW, could you pls kindly to explain to our native fellow and foreign friends what does
the 干 mean here?
is that was just[A] character had two stroke differences with 牛, or[b] meaning外强中干 or
[C] an ajactive means dry, or [D] the verb with famous meaning?
if your answer is any of A,B,C, then pls slip next paragraph, i m also sorry for got you wrong,
otherwise, pls read my tip for you as below:

next time before you using it, pls make sure it's not a stone in front of you.

Quote:

Another very good source is 大漢和辭典 a Chinese-Japanese Dictionary by
橋本·万太郎MantarôHashimoto. It lists Chinese (Tang, Song) with Japanese 平仮名hiragana
showing the Chinese (Tang, Song) pronounciation, and then the Sino-Japanese (Japanese Kanji loan)
pronounciation. This dictionary has been very helpful to the reconstruction of Late Middle Chinese.

about the 大漢和辭典 as a source, i think it's not realiable either, since:
1/诸 桥 辙 次 , is that 橋本·万太郎? according to my sorce, the auther is him, is a
modern scholar, the ancient chinese pronounciation even a chinese couldnt find it, how come a
japenese can do?

2/assuming his work based on ancient japanese records in hiragana of chinese pronunciation, dont
you think hiragana's pronunciation had its own evolvement source? i mean their ancient
pronunciation couldnt been as same as today's.

enjoy your holidays, the same to all the others who living in china right now, i'll be back after
it. catch you all later!

DavidHan -

Quote:

Does Vietnamese have many homophones, because Chinese has too many homophones for me to
communicate effectively simply using Pīnyín. Would I be able to communicate effectively simply
using Hán Việt?

I think Vietnamese have many homophones, but less than Chinese. And you can using Hán Việt in
communication, but it's not simple, because if you use Hán Việt so much with a native people,
they won't understand you ( like me, hic hic hic, understand nothing)

nnt -

Quote:

I think Vietnamese have many homophones, but less than Chinese. And you can using Hán Việt in
communication

We should distinguish Hán Việt words and Hán Việt as Sino-Vietnamese (Chinese language with
Vietnamese pronunciation).
Vietnamese do not "speak" Hán Việt, but Vietnamese vocabulary is full of Hán Việt words.
"Vietnamese language" in Vietnamese is "tiếng Việt", in which Việt 越 itself is a Hán
Việt word.
Việt ngữ 越语 is also used as a synonym for "tiếng Việt" in Vietnamese, but it
sounds more pedantic in a Vietnamese context. In this case Việt ngữ is itself a Hán Việt
word...

DavidHan -

Well well, you're right, hihihi. I've learnt manythings from you. Very interesting. But what is
Sino-Vietnamese????

nnt -

Quote:

But what is Sino-Vietnamese????

It's Hán Việt (Chinese pronounced Vietnamese way). You can take any Chinese text, modern or
classic, and pronounce it Vietnamese way: it's Sino-Vietnamese.
A modern Chinese text in Hán Việt, especially those including conversations, would seem rather
odd even for Vietnamese ears.

shibo77 -

Quote:

sure, your writing is a living proof.

Arrrr!!!!

諸橋·徹次 MOROHASHI Tetsuji is another name. Same person. It is useful because it lists the
Japanese pronounciations of the loaned words. Right, it is not very reliable either. The
大漢和辞典 is a great achievement in lexicography that which only the Oxford English
Dictionary have surpassed. The information presented is considered very accurate. It lists the
Kanji, the older scripts and variations(大篆,小篆), the modern hiragana, the Sino-Japanese
pronounciation (漢音, 吳音,慣用音) the ancient hentaigana, the modern Mandarin
pronounciation, the pronounciation according to "反切fanqie" to show the Middle Chinese
pronounciations which he analysed from older sources (廣韻,辞海,中華大字典), the
"方韻square rhyme" to mark the Middle Chinese tones(平,上,去,入,轻is not marked). Of
course, Japanese phonology had its own evolution. But because Japanese is written with a
syllabary, historical Japanese phonology is very well understood. Compared to historical Chinese
phonology 简直就是小菜一碟. Japanese phonology can be basically summarised in one page.

Happy May 1st!

Workers of the world, unite!

- Shibo

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Chinese Online Class - Translation of a plate - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Translation of a plate
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Page 3 of 3 < 12 3

imron -

Ah ok, now I see it. Initially I didn't look at the enlarged image, just the small thumbnail, and
I didn't see that the middle vertical stroke (what becomes the right-hand vertical stroke of 耳)
extends so far. It kind of disappears in the thumbnail.

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roddy -

Quote:

Ah ok, now I see it. Initially I didn't look at the enlarged image, just the small thumbnail, and
I didn't see that the middle vertical stroke (what becomes the right-hand vertical stroke of 耳)
extends so far. It kind of disappears in the thumbnail.

Oooh, there's a bigger one

Ok, I see what everyone was talking about now.

linlu -

the characater is 取
and the handwriting is not good.

trien27 -

it's a combination of characters. qu[to take: character as a whole]? ren[person: 2 strokes in
middle]? Maybe it's an attempt to duplicate an existing ancient Chinese character into something
fancy[to please someone who's oblivious to the Chinese language]? Badly modified character. Or
maybe the creator is trying to combine different Chinese calligraphic styles into one?

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Mobile Phones

Thread: Mobile Phones
View Single Post

  #1 

Mobile Phones

GSM
Your unlocked GSM mobile phone will most likely work perfectly in China. If you're coming from
North America, ensure that you have a tri- or quad-band phone as the North American standard uses
850/1900 MHz, whereas China uses the 900/1800 MHz GSM standard, which is the most common standard.
A North American tri-band GSM phone will support 850/1800/1900 MHz and quad-band will support
850/900/1800/1900 MHz.

There are 2 large providers in China, China Mobile and Unicom.

It's probably easiest to go with a prepaid (pay as you go) plan. These also do not require you to
provide your passport. China Mobile offers two popular prepaid plans called Shenzhouxing and
M-Zone.

You can buy a GSM starter kit in any shop that sells mobile phones. The starter kit can be as
cheap as 60 RMB. The shop may try to sell you more expensive kits based on the desirability of the
number, especially being a foreigner, so you may have to ask a few times for the cheapest numbers.

The recharge is a little tricky and I suggest you let it be done by the staff where you buy the
card. Recharge cards are RMB50 and 100.

Once you get your card, you may want to consider activating a monthly "package" to get free
incoming minutes, SMS messages, or some data access. These packages cost from 10 RMB/month and up.

Unicom has a unique card for HK users, that gives you 2 number, a number in China, and one in Hong
Kong on the same SIM card. Mean, for those who travel often between China and HK they don't have
to switch cards and don't have roaming cost. If somebody calls the China number while one is in
Hong Kong, only the local cost will be charged.

Xiaolingtong (小灵通)
It looks like GSM, but is not related. The SIM card looks the same too, it will not work in any
GSM phone. With Xiaolingtong you get a local phone number with area code (i.e. 0755 ********* in
Shenzhen), the phone will then only work withing the 0755 area. Receiving calls is free. You only
pay for outgoing calls. A starter set including phone is around RMB400.

This is a very rudimentary wiki article, further input is welcome.

====================================================================================================

Contributors: cdn_in_bj, flameproof
Created by flameproof, 19th December 2007 at 02:17 PM
Last edited by cdn_in_bj, 19th December 2007 at 02:48 PM
0 Comments , 1153 Views

Discussion

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Re: Quick Note on Admin Notes

Oh, that was Imron warning me off. Normally you can't actually do that to an admin - we're also
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Quick Note on Admin Notes

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Posted By roddy

Re: Quick Note on Admin Notes

Oh, that was Imron warning me off. Normally you can't actually do that to an admin - we're also
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Quick Note on Admin Notes

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Quick Note on Admin Notes

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 22nd April 2008, 09:23 PM

Replies: 12

how to make gelato?

Views: 464

Posted By yonglin

Re: how to make gelato?

This is why they make ice-cream machines. If you don't stir the ice cream to break the ice
crystals during the freezing process, they will remain (large) in the final product. By stirring,
you break...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 23rd June 2006, 07:15 PM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By Roee

As far as I'm concerned the one million dollar...

As far as I'm concerned the one million dollar question is: how do you maintain language skills
when there are several languages involved.

Some have natural abilities to retain even 10 or 20...

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - How many characters do YOU know? - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Reading and Writing

How many characters do YOU know?
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smithsgj -

Trooper's right. You have to learn the characters, and you have to know the ways they combine to
form words... also you have to figure out where the boundaries between the words are -- no mean
feat!

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bathrobe -

How important is this?

And what does it mean to 'know' a character?

I don't know how many characters I know. Maybe 2,000. Maybe 3,000.

On the other hand, I can read Chinese newspaper articles without too much effort. That is, I can
get the meaning without a lot of trouble. But don't ask me to read out loud -- there'll be a lot
of 'I think this is how it's pronounced, but I'm not sure'. And certainly don't bother asking me
to write. Now that I use a computer, I've almost forgotten how to write half my characters!

So I wonder whether this 'number of characters' thing is an important or even a realistic question.

roddy -

I agree very much with what bathrobe says about reading newspapers. I can get through huge chucks
of text with very little trouble, but discuss it afterwords? No chance.

I'd guess I'm also in the 2-3,000 range (newspaper reading and then some) but again, it's vocab,
not characters, that you need.

I think there's another topic on this from some time ago, back when the board was young - if you
have a look round the last couple of pages you might find it . . .

Roddy

Jamie -

Trooper, you bring up an excellent point.

Bathrobe, by 'know' I mean 'comprehend'. I brought this up:
1) out of a simple curiosity to see what levels different people are at
2) (and more importantly) to see if there is a correlation between how many characters (or
compound characters) one knows and how much one understands written text. What it comes down to is
that an extensive knowledge of characters doesn't necessarily represent comprehension of written
text.

So that said, do those who have strong speaking skills feel that they have an easier understanding
of written text??

(This is the link to the previous topic: http://www. From Beijing Chinese School/viewtopic.php?t=8. Sorry
Roddy, I hadn't read all the way back to the first page!)

smithsgj -

But there are characters that I comprehend from the context, but can't write and can't pronounce.
Can write and can't pronounce. Can pronounce but can't write. Could make a guess at pronunciation.
Sort of comprehend, can pronounce and write easily. Get the meaning of what seems to be a word,
without having a clue about one of the characters. And whatever other permutations are left.

It's easy if you've been studying Chinese for 3 weeks and have mastered the reading writing and
pronunciation of twelve characters. But if you've been exposed to Chinese from a variety of
sources for several years, which may or may not include a period of formal textbook learning,
there is no meaningful way to quantify the characters you know (or comprehend, even).

> So that said, do those who have strong speaking skills feel that they have an easier
understanding of written text??

Mandarin is different from other languages. The writing system (and the difference in written and
spoken styles, which is itself a product of the writing system) is a very indirect representation
of the spoken language. This means that it is much harder to reinforce reading skills, say,
through speaking practice, as you would do with French or Spanish: you can't just pick up
something from a conversation and add it to your reading repertoire.

So Jamie there is a weaker correlation between strong speaking skills and reading comprehension
than there is in languages written alphabetically.

thepokergod -

I can write about 400 and read about twice that. But as roddy says vocab is much more important. I
could certainly read a fair chunk of newspaper out load but not have a clue what it means.

skylee -

Quote:

Originally Posted by smithsgj

But there are characters that I comprehend from the context, but can't write and can't pronounce.
Can write and can't pronounce. Can pronounce but can't write. Could make a guess at pronunciation.
Sort of comprehend, can pronounce and write easily. Get the meaning of what seems to be a word,
without having a clue about one of the characters. And whatever other permutations are left.

Ha, same here.

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Friday, May 30, 2008

Chinese School - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 9th November 2007, 09:09 PM

Replies: 2

Odd Redirect on Links

Views: 381

Posted By muyongshi

Re: Odd Redirect on Links

Okay so must be something on their side then...Thanks!

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 9th November 2007, 08:55 PM

Replies: 2

Odd Redirect on Links

Views: 381

Posted By muyongshi

Odd Redirect on Links

So a couple of times today when I have clicked on a link or refreshed a page (sorry I haven't paid
attention to what I was doing specifically especially because the first time I thought it was my...

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Chinese language - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Forums Information 22nd June 2005, 07:37 PM

Replies: 0

Donations

Views: 1,976

Posted By roddy

Donations

In response to a couple of queries, I've put a Paypal donations button on the Front Page
(http://www. From Beijing Chinese School are not in any financial difficulty. However, if you've found the...

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 2nd May 2008, 01:53 PM

Replies: 40

German

Views: 1,017

Posted By rezaf

Re: German

The grammar is a little bit difficult but unlike Chinese the rules apply in most of the cases and
if you follow them you won't have any problems. German is very easy to lean for someone who
knows...

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Learn mandarin - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 16th February 2004, 12:42 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By nathanuk88

English - Native Hello! French - 4...

English - Native Hello!
French - 4 Years Bonjour!
German - 3 Years Guten Tag!
Russian - 2 Years Здравствуйте!
Spanish - 1 Year ¡Hola!
Starting...

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Chinese language - Ethnic minorities welcome visitors

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�� RMB should not appreciate too fast - experts

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�� Making the elderly in the countryside enjoy their life

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�� Exhibition of world famous photographers' masterpiece

�� Fire-fighting emergency exercise launched

��Home>>

Ethnic minorities welcome visitors

www.chinanews.cn 2006-07-18 16:30:36

Ethnic minorities of Yi and Dai are welcoming visitors from home and
aboard. The Second Travel Festival opened in Guling Mountain, Henan
Province on July 15.

Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
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Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service

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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Chinese School - Giant Panda Habitat included into WHC List

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Giant Panda Habitat included into WHC List

www.chinanews.cn 2006-07-13 08:56:18

(Source: Xinhua)

People celebrate the Giant Panda Habitat is included into WHC List.

Two giant pandas play with each other on a tree in their habitat in
China's southwestern Sichuan Province.(Photo: scol.com.cn)

VILNIUS, Lithuania, July 12 - Members of the 30th session of the World
Heritage Committee (WHC) agreed on Wednesday to put China's giant panda
habitat on the World Heritage List.
After deliberation, the WHC unanimously agreed to place the panda habitat
on the list, making it the 35th Chinese site to be included.
"We greatly thank the Chinese government for submitting such a good
application to the WHC to enrich the World Heritage List and its
tremendous efforts to protect such a precious site of bio-diversity,"
said the WHC.
"This is a great success for China, the World Heritage Convention and for
conservation in general," said David Sheppard, head of the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN)
delegation in Vilnius.
"It shows how the World Heritage Convention can encourage governments to
ensure the greatest level of protection for globally important sites," he
said.
Lu Zhi, professor from College of Life Science of Beijing University said
Chinese governments of all levels have made long-time effort in
protecting the rare giant pandas and their habitat, which covers an area
of 9,245 square km between Da Duhe and Minjiang in southwest Sichuang
Province.
The giant panda "serves as a flagship in terms of animal species and
loved by people around the world," and "the habitat is of universal value
in bio-diversity, which has been agreed universally," said Lu, a expert
for the protection of natural heritage.
"That's why the UNESCO's World Heritage Center is keen to put it on the
World Heritage List," she said.
The World Wildlife Fund's former China Director, James Harkness, once
said that the panda's territory was one of the most critical regions for
bio-diversity conservation in the world. Its diverse habitats contain
many rare and endangered animals and plant species.
The inclusion is of great significance in better protecting rare animal
species such as golden-haired monkeys, antelopes aside from giant pandas,
as well as plant species whose numbers are more than 10,000 kinds in the
area.
"To protect an animal is not just put it living in the zoo, but keep it
live along in its own home," Lu said.
Wang Fengwu, member of the Chinese delegation to the meeting, told
reporters that China had spent 20 years attempting to get the panda
habitat included on the World Heritage List.
China's earnest will to protect world heritage received appreciation from
the WHC, which put the panda habitat at the top of the agenda of 37 sites
to be discussed for inclusion at the meeting.
The giant pandas and their habitat will be protected in the future not
only in accordance with Chinese law but also international law, he added.
Wang believed that the successful inclusion of the site on the list would
prompt effective protection of rare and endangered animals and plant
species that depend on the habitat. This would help to ensure that the
giant pandas survive for generations to come.
As China is not one of the 21 members of the WHC, it did not submit a
report on the site, Wang told reporters, adding that the WHC agreed to
place the site on the list after deliberating over a report submitted by
international experts.
The report spoke highly of the habitat's bio-diversity value, describing
it as an area featuring rare and endangered animals and plants.
Experts also said urgent improvements needed to be made to protect the
site, proposing that the construction of water plants, roads and other
development inside the habitat be controlled.
Aside from China's giant panda habitat, the committee also put Colombia's
Malpelo Flora and Fauna Sanctuary and Finland's Kvarken Archipelago on
the list.
The Malpelo Flora and Fauna Sanctuary forms part of the critical marine
biological corridor with the Galapagos, Cocos and Coiba Islands Wolrd
Heritage sites.
Its extensive marine area of 857,150 hectares is the largest no-fishing
zone in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and considered of huge value to
maintain and replenish the number of threatened and endangered marine
species.
The coastline of Finland's Kvarken Archipelago was recognized by the WHC
for its global value in demonstrating the Earth's geological processes.
It is an extension of the High Coast of Sweden World Heritage site
because of the uplift of the earth's crust following the retreat of the
last ice age glaciers in this area some 10,000 years ago.
Furthermore, the WHC decided not to put the Tropical Rainforest Heritage
of Sumatra, Indonesia, on the List of World Heritage in Danger despite
escalating threats to the site.
The number of the List of World Nature Heritage in Danger was reduced
from 15 to 13 following the removal of the Tunisia's Ichkeul National
Park and the Senegal's Djoudj Bird Sanctuary from the list.
But the WHC said it will consider to put the site into the danger list in
2007 if no progress has been made.
The July 8-16 session of the WHC has been examining 37 new sites from 30
states bidding to be included into the World Heritage List.
The ruins of the Shang Dynasty capital in Anyang city of Henan province
is under discussion for inclusion into the cultural heritage list.

Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service

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Saturday, May 24, 2008

Learn mandarin - Stations preparing for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway operation

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�� A glimpse at sweatshops in China

�� Shanghai the int'l metropolis is losing Chinese characteristics

�� China tries out new retirement modes

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�� Nicole Kidman in Shanghai

�� National Water Lily Exhibition in Hangzhou

�� Quanzhou set up first emergency shelter

��Home>>

Stations preparing for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway operation

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-30 16:00:25

All tickets of the first train from Xining to Lhasa were sold out on June
29. Qinghai-Tibet Railway, which has drawn worldwide attention, will
formally open to traffic on July 1. Beijing, Chengdu and Xining will run
trains heading for Tibet. Pictured: staff members of Xining Railway
Station were making preparations for the first train to Tibet.

Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
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Friday, May 23, 2008

Chinese Class - Chinese banks' listing parades: Good or bad?

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�� Migrant workers face love and marriage dilemmas

  Photos

�� Nicole Kidman in Shanghai

�� National Water Lily Exhibition in Hangzhou

�� Quanzhou set up first emergency shelter

��Home>>China Observer

Chinese banks' listing parades: Good or bad?

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-20 09:44:11

Hong Kong is still the first choice for banks in the Chinese mainland to
be listed abroad.

Chinanews, Jun.19 - Beginning in 2005, Chinese banks chose to consider
mergers and went to stock markets. These activities reached a climax when
the Bank of China was listed in the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. But this
was only one of the latest activities that Chinese banks went in for on
the stock market.
The Bank of China, China Construction Bank (CCB), Huaxia Bank and Bank of
Beijing all found their investors abroad in 2005. In 2006, the Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) accomplished its merger case, with a
volume amounting to US $3.58 billion. After the Bank of Communications,
CCB and Bank of China were listed in the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, ICBC,
China Merchants Bank, China��s Industrial Bank, CITIC Industrial Bank and
the Commercial Bank of Nanjing also had their own plan to get listed in
the stock market this year. People feel hard to judge whether such
activities are good or not. Jing Ulrich, JP Morgan��s Hong Kong-based
managing director and chairman of its China equities business, told our
reporter that Hong Kong was still the first choice for banks in the
Chinese mainland to be listed abroad. The main reason was that Hong Kong
possessed huge amounts of circulating funds, which could attract
international investments easier.
Most people might believe they can gain more profits through such
activities, but experts considered them as a process punctuated with good
and bad news. Some analysts warned that less than half of Chinese banks
had reached 8% of capital adequacy rate. Moreover, these banks were still
involved in scandals, which made people suspect their abilities to
protect the investors from financial crisis.
In fact, Chinese banks are forced to participate in the stock market. The
managing director of JP Morgan Securities (Asia Pacific) Meng Liang said,
��The commercial competition has become more fierce after China joined
the World Trade Organization (WTO), forcing enterprises to improve their
core proficiencies to compete with others. As a result, many Chinese
banks have decided to get listed in the stock exchanges before the WTO
transition period for China ends.

          ��CITIC bank plans to launch IPO this year
          ��Central Bank Governor encourages Employee Stockholding
          ��Bank of China to start HK public offering
          ��Bank of China confirms US$3 billion IPO

Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
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Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Staff of Qinghai-Tibet Railway trained for better service

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�� China's oil security faces four major threats

�� China makes efforts to build spindle-shaped income distribution
structure

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�� China's new spokeswoman of foreign affairs

�� Qinghai-Tibet Railway stations to start operation

�� Foreigners study traditional Chinese medicine

��Home>>Life

Staff of Qinghai-Tibet Railway trained for better service

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-14 17:00:17

Chinanews, June 14 - A Tibetan girl Qingcuo stood on the platform,
smiling, and extended her hand to her etiquette teacher Wen Qikun. Mr.
Wen returned her greeting while instructing Qingcuo how to make a more
natural smile. Qingcuo was learning how to shake hands in a more
appropriate way. Staff working for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, from train
attendants to conductors, have to participate in trainings in terms of
language, physique and service.
According to Mr.Wen, most staff are shy when they first appear on stage
for the first time. He revealed that in physique training classes, most
learners were so timid that their movements tended to be unnatural and
unrelaxed during the early phase of such training. Through instruction,
they became more and more confident and eventually their movements became
good enough to meet the required standards.
A conductor named Liu Yanping said that these students should be
associate degree holders or above. These training sessions aim to provide
better service for passengers on the trains running on the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, which will open to traffic on July 1. They are specially
selected from various teams and there are specific requirements regarding
their appearance, height and age.
As a matter of fact, not all interns can end up working on trains on the
Qinghai-Tibet Railway. Liang, a learner of Han nationality, said that
they need to pass an exam before working on the trains. This exam
includes railway security, emergency plans and also knowledge of hygiene
and sanitation on the plateau. Learners should gain a good understanding
of all types of high altitude diseases and first aid procedures. At
present, over 300 students from train attendants to conductors have
completed such training here.
Moreover, students of Han nationality are required to learn Tibetan.
Liang said that now they can already conduct simple conversation in
Tibetan. These students used to meet Tibetans from Qinghai Province and
their Tibetan pronunciation is quite different from the authentic Tibetan
based on the Lhasa accent. Therefore, those who speak Tibetan with
different pronunciations and accents could not communicate with each
other. Luckily, there happened to be three Tibetan students from Lhasa in
the class and they can teach those of Han nationality and correct their
pronunciations. Talking of their job, the above three Tibetans are proud
of what they are doing, as they will take up jobs at a Tibet railway
station. Lhasa mayor Norbu Dunzhub said that Qinghai-Tibet Railway will
lower the prices in Tibet and enhance Tibetans' living standard, which is
the greatest benefit that the railway will bring to Tibet.

          ��Qinghai-Tibet Railway stations to start operation
          ��No news yet for the sales of tickets for trains that will run
on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
          ��Tibetan antelopes adapted to the channel cross Qinghai-Tibet
Railway
          ��Qinghai-Tibet Rail to bring mineral water to Beijing
          ��
          ��Police petrol on horses in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
          ��Qinghai-Tibet Railway to bring more visitors to Tibet
          ��Qinghai-Tibet railway not exclusive for foreigners
          ��Five-star trains to run on Qinghai-Tibet Railway

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Chinese Lesson - College entrance examinees relaxed after test

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College entrance examinees relaxed after test

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-09 15:20:54

The 2006 college entrance examination of China Beijing section closed on
June 8. Picture1: students of the affiliated high school of Renmin
University of China left the exam rooms relaxed after the exam.

Picture 2: an examinee was surprised to receive greeting from the mother
with flowers after leaving the room.

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Chinese language - RMB daily appreciation breaks the record

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RMB daily appreciation breaks the record

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-06 17:48:55

Chinanews, June 6 - The basis point of the middle rate of the RMB raised
by 118 on June 5, and this was the greatest daily appreciation ever since
the exchange rate reform. RMB appreciation was opposelessly high on the
trading markets. Some people in the business think that the listing of
the Bank of China and the weakening of the US dollar play a part in the
great appreciation of the yuan.
The median rate of the US dollar to the RMB opened with the rate as high
as 8.0096 yuan on the spot exchange market between banks, which was 118
points higher than 8.0214 yuan last week. The yuan kept on rising until
it broke the point of 8.02 and 8.01. This was the greatest daily
appreciation since the exchange rate reform, and the first time to break
the point of 8.01 in two weeks. The accumulative total appreciation rate
of the yuan since the exchange rate reform rose from 1% to 1.2%.
RMB seemed to be invincible on the trading markets, too. The US dollar to
the yuan closed at 8.0086 yuan at the match secondary market, which was
129 points lower than the day before. On the enquiry market, the closing
price was 153 points lower, at 8.0077 yuan. Thus, the yuan broke the
record of the highest daily appreciation on both the secondary and
enquiry market, and its all three trading prices greatly raised, which is
very rare.
Some traders observe that as far as the US dollar can not cast off the
shadow of weakening, it will be the force to drive RMB to further
appreciation.

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