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Mandarin and Japanese

  Tags: Mandarin | Japanese
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14 messages over 2 pages: 1 2  Next >>
linguaholic_ch
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Speaks: English, Hindi, Bengali
Studies: Japanese, Esperanto, French

 
 Message 1 of 14
27 March 2014 at 4:59pm | IP Logged 

Hello fellow members and language learners,

I am writing this post today due to this strong urge within me to continue what I had
left off in childhood. I always had an interest in East Asian languages until I chose
French as my first foreign language to study seriously. My motivation to learn French
has come from the desire to read French literary works,to know the culture in depth and
of course for job purposes and so on. I had dropped learning Japanese when I was 13,
and now I want to learn it again, only because French is becoming a little boring, and
I need some time to kill this boredom. And it certainly helps me because I can progress
in French better when I keep it aside for a few days.

I love Japanese because of the culture, philosophy and a certain element which I can't
describe when I think of Japan. When I was small, I used to think I was from Japan in
my past life (oops :P). But after learning about China, it is the same for me. Both of
these languages fascinate and enchant me with their mystery. I don't like Anime and
Manga and I rule them out as a reason to learn Japanese. But the time has come, when I
have to choose between the two, because you can't do both.

So please friends, help me to understand how both of these cultures accept outsiders
and what is their type of literature. I would nor read pessimistic.dark,horrifying or
cynical literature, neither some watch some prejudiced pieces against other countries
which I heard both Japanese and Chinese have.

PS: I am not choosing Japanese or Mandarin so as to replace French, but because I like
learning languages. One language isn't enough.

Thank you.
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Ari
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2314 posts - 5695 votes 
Speaks: Swedish*, English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Mandarin, Cantonese
Studies: Czech, Latin, German

 
 Message 2 of 14
27 March 2014 at 6:15pm | IP Logged 
My experience with Chinese people are that they are extremely happy when foreigners speak their language. When you say "Chinese" I'm assuming you mean Mandarin. Mandarin speakers are less enthusiastic about foreigners speaking their language than are Cantonese speakers (and probably speakers of other Chinese languages), but it's still a very positive attitude. However, no matter how well you speak it and no matter how long you live in China, you will never be seen as one of them. You'll always be an outsider, a foreigner. They will always treat you as a guest, which is nice but gets old if you stay for a long time.

Racism is definitely a factor in China. My experiences are influenced by me being white, and thus subjected to positive stereotyping. I've heard well educated, worldly and otherwise very nice and friendly Chinese people utter statements like "I have nothing against Indians, but they're very dirty" and "That Indian guy smiled at me; it was really scary!". And that's in Hong Kong, with a large Indian population and a very cosmopolitan world view. Not everyone is like that, of course, but you're likely to encounter the attitude. In Mainland China these kinds of attitudes are more common than in Hong Kong, and you should also factor in the political situation in the PRC, with censorship and undemocratic leadership. I don't want to get into politics, but it might influence your decision.
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shk00design
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Speaks: Cantonese*, English, Mandarin
Studies: French

 
 Message 3 of 14
27 March 2014 at 7:20pm | IP Logged 
The Chinese community outside of China tend to be divided between Mandarin & Cantonese. There are
other places in S. E. Asia where the Fukien & Hakka dialect are common. A lot of Chinese outside China
will speak the dialect of their parents and will usually communicate in either Mandarin / Cantonese but
not both. When 2 Chinese meet each other, it is common for them to switch to English when 1 person
cannot understand the other person's dialect.

A lot of foreigners tend to learn Mandarin before Cantonese partly because China has a big population
and Mandarin has a fewer tones. When it comes to Simplified over Traditional characters most
foreigners tend to prefer Simplified because many difficult character has fewer lines to write and China
having a large population. Places like Hong Kong & Taiwan hated the Chinese communists and anything
associated with the Party. If you study in Taiwan, they don't consider Simplified Chinese as another style
of writing / font, it is simply the "wrong" way because the communists destroyed a lot of Chinese
traditions.

Japanese is spoken mostly in Japan. There used to be a larger # Japanese in N. America but after WWII,
some of these were repatriated back to Japan. And since the economy of Japan has been strong, far
fewer Japanese would emigrate abroad. You find a much larger expat Chinese population especially in
S-E Asia where Mandarin is widely spoken and the US.

When it comes to learning the language, the Chinese relies on memorizing & recognizing characters.
The Japanese language does have an alphabet and can be written entirely in phonetics like Korean. They
prefer to write using many Chinese characters except for foreign words like "McDonald's" &
"hamburger".
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linguaholic_ch
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Speaks: English, Hindi, Bengali
Studies: Japanese, Esperanto, French

 
 Message 4 of 14
28 March 2014 at 4:30am | IP Logged 

I have great respect for China and Chinese culture, but when it comes to politics, it
disheartens. I always feel happy when I see that China and India foster friendly
relations, especially when old wounds and territorial problems are not the obstacle. In
India too, I have many of my friends make fun of Chinese and their language, a racist
stereotype, which extends even to those who come from North-East India, due to which
there had been protests.

I always hope that I will open the newspaper one day and see that China and India had
both done away with their arguments and coexist harmoniously.Cantonese is too difficult
for me, so it is not in the cards now. But the die-hard privacy that China exhibit. is an
important factor.
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linguaholic_ch
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Speaks: English, Hindi, Bengali
Studies: Japanese, Esperanto, French

 
 Message 5 of 14
28 March 2014 at 4:32am | IP Logged 

Thanks Ari and shk00design, it was helpful and necessary.

Edited by linguaholic_ch on 28 March 2014 at 4:35am

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Ari
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Speaks: Swedish*, English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Mandarin, Cantonese
Studies: Czech, Latin, German

 
 Message 6 of 14
28 March 2014 at 6:21pm | IP Logged 
linguaholic_ch wrote:
Cantonese is too difficult for me, so it is not in the cards now.

For most learners, Mandarin is probably the way to go, but I just wanted to counter the common idea that Cantonese is more difficult than Mandarin. Most Cantonese speakers are also convinced of this, and I'm not sure where it comes from. Maybe because people can't think of foreigners who speak good Cantonese, so the availibility bias kicks in.

On the other hand, it's true to some degree, since Cantonese has a derth of resources, which means it's harder to get enough materials to learn. And to be considered fully literate, you'd have to learn to read Mandarin with Cantonese pronunication, but the language itself is hardly more difficult. The tones are more, sure, but the rest of the phonetics are easier (the Mandarin initials like q, j, c, x, s, z, sh, ch, zh are notoriously hard for forigners to get right), and the grammar is largely the same between the laguages.
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YnEoS
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472 posts - 893 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Russian, Cantonese, Japanese, French, Hungarian, Czech, Swedish, Mandarin, Italian, Spanish

 
 Message 7 of 14
28 March 2014 at 7:09pm | IP Logged 
Actually, if the Assimil Cantonese comes out this year as planned, there will be a pretty decent amount of beginner Cantonese resources available. Though of course there will always be much much more for Mandarin.
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Medulin
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 Message 8 of 14
29 March 2014 at 12:34pm | IP Logged 
Cantonese is easier since you don't have to learn how to write it,
all writing in Hong Kong and Macau is done in Mandarin (although in traditional script).
Only gossip magazines of questionable quality are written in Cantonese.
(Good luck in trying to find Harry Potter with Cantonese vocabulary and syntax).



Edited by Medulin on 29 March 2014 at 12:36pm



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