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Chinese cannot be Latinised !

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minus273
Triglot
Senior Member
France
Joined 5765 days ago

288 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: Mandarin*, EnglishC2, French
Studies: Ancient Greek, Tibetan

 
 Message 73 of 77
17 July 2009 at 5:49am | IP Logged 
Pyx wrote:
PS: 啊哟, you and you PSs. Pretty much every time while I compose my answer you append something to your original posts :P

Just ignore'em and PS later the replies to PS's. I justify myself that doing this way we clutter the thread less.
Pyx wrote:
That book sounds interesting. Is it in English or in Chinese? I'm living in Beijing -- so if it's Chinese, could you give me the original title? Thanks!

Both, I guess. 《通字方案》 / A Project for General Chinese
Being a legitimate successor to the full-fledged Chinese script, it is a syllabary of 2085 characters, and a complex Latin-based orthography for the 2085 possible superdialectical syllables.

edit: Wrong English name

Edited by minus273 on 17 July 2009 at 5:50am

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minus273
Triglot
Senior Member
France
Joined 5765 days ago

288 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: Mandarin*, EnglishC2, French
Studies: Ancient Greek, Tibetan

 
 Message 74 of 77
17 July 2009 at 6:06am | IP Logged 
Pyx wrote:
Hm.. is that based on facts or do you imagine that it works like that?

My hometown is fairly rich, and every family has at least an educated child that can read and write in quasi-MSM.

Quote:
My problem with that is that these people (judging from Mandarin, because only there I know the numbers) would have to learn to write 400-odd characters to only get the basic syllables down. At least four times that number with tones.

True. And it's a good point.

Quote:
I'm not sure how realistic that is.

Not that unrealistic, I insist.

Quote:
And even if they happen to know all those characters to write so that they can emulate their speech, chances are good that they still can't read, even if they know the words in the vernacular.

The number of core words seperating MSM-based writing and dialectical writing don't exceed 150 - large, but attainable by sufficient exposure.

Quote:
This opens the door for abuse, e.g. in form of corrupt officials that can tell them pretty much whatever they want is a law, as those poor souls cannot verify that for themselves.

Valid point. The legal jargon is quite known, and people may be able to guess their way in the Beijing pronunciation...
Actual scenario:
Quote:
Angry people: But it's written here, black words on white paper!
Official: But it's just a law... Nothing serious.


Quote:
Sure, once the people are good enough to read 'colloquial texts in MSM grammar' that is no problem (of the language)

I meant the usual written language with an MSM structure, filled with local words, which are replaced with MSM/literary words upwards the prestige ladder.

Quote:
I just believe that this is not the case for far too many people, and I believe characters are part of the problem.

Regions with a perfect alphabet (the Spanish world plus many states of India) are illiterate-laden. The problem lies just elsewhere.
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gaa1gaa1
Newbie
China
Joined 5614 days ago

30 posts - 39 votes
Speaks: Mandarin*

 
 Message 75 of 77
17 July 2009 at 6:32am | IP Logged 
Pyx wrote:

Of course there other problems too, but as long as characters act as bound feet in your metaphor, 'cultural' and 'aesthetically pleasing',

I'm afraid not so. In fact, protecting characters from Latinisation or anything else is absolutely not for self-injury (bound feet is a wrong metaphor), and only partly for cultural and aesthetically pleasing, instead, another crucial factor is to protect the written form system of Chinese language, as a real language, it can't just contain some colloquial words such as "hello, bye, thanks, good afternoon, how're things going with you", perhaps written form is of utmost importance while reading something necessary, I've already repeated the differences between Chinese and European languages over and over, and few people could quite catch on to the essential parts. But it's not strange enough, because as a non-English or non-Italian speaker, I can't hit the right nail on the head while commenting on their souls, either.


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Pyx
Diglot
Senior Member
China
Joined 5735 days ago

670 posts - 892 votes 
Speaks: German*, English
Studies: Mandarin

 
 Message 76 of 77
17 July 2009 at 7:07am | IP Logged 
minus273 wrote:

The number of core words seperating MSM-based writing and dialectical writing don't exceed 150 - large, but attainable by sufficient exposure.

Quote:
This opens the door for abuse, e.g. in form of corrupt officials that can tell them pretty much whatever they want is a law, as those poor souls cannot verify that for themselves.

Valid point. The legal jargon is quite known, and people may be able to guess their way in the Beijing pronunciation...

Quote:
Sure, once the people are good enough to read 'colloquial texts in MSM grammar' that is no problem (of the language)

I meant the usual written language with an MSM structure, filled with local words, which are replaced with MSM/literary words upwards the prestige ladder.


Mhm, I think you, or perhaps both of us are confusing two separate issues:
The first is Mandarin vs. Fangyan and how characters play in there (good points on both sides) and the other one is literacy (esp. for poor people) in general, not necessarily related to MSM. And there some sort of alphabetic writing (at least in addition to characters. Nobody ever said they should be banned and forgotten) could help enormously. Your reference to illiteracy in other countries is a valid one, but I'm sure you will agree with me that characters are at least yet another major hurdle for those people.

It's hard to keep all those issues apart, especially with such a broad starting question. Anyway, I found some of the things you wrote (in this thread, not just the last point) very illuminating, minus. Thanks.
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minus273
Triglot
Senior Member
France
Joined 5765 days ago

288 posts - 346 votes 
Speaks: Mandarin*, EnglishC2, French
Studies: Ancient Greek, Tibetan

 
 Message 77 of 77
17 July 2009 at 2:07pm | IP Logged 
Pyx wrote:
Mhm, I think you, or perhaps both of us are confusing two separate issues:
The first is Mandarin vs. Fangyan and how characters play in there (good points on both sides)

Put it otherwise, literacy in a written norm comprehensible to the larger Sinophone world.
Pyx wrote:
and the other one is literacy (esp. for poor people) in general, not necessarily related to MSM.

"Vernacular literacy", maybe? In search of a good term. I understand that, with vernacular literacy, we can translate from the written norm (be it Hanzi or Luomazi) to the vernacular language - for "How to Rear Pigs"'s and maybe market news, and that barrierless written communication, though in a limited scale, facilitates life greatly.
Pyx wrote:
And there some sort of alphabetic writing (at least in addition to characters. Nobody ever said they should be banned and forgotten) could help enormously. Your reference to illiteracy in other countries is a valid one, but I'm sure you will agree with me that characters are at least yet another major hurdle for those people.

I fully support introduction of alphabets for local communication, just as what the glorious missionaries had done.

Discussion finished. Ouf.

PS: I read yesterday that my daily word for "begin" (开始) wasn't present at Beijing speech 100 years ago, it's a borrowing from Classical Chinese/MSM. I was shocked. I certainly need to review my assumptions of the relation between dialectical forms and Classical roots.

Edited by minus273 on 17 July 2009 at 2:23pm



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