Chinese Mandarin
Number of speakers:
885 million
Key dialects: Northern, Northwestern, Southwestern, Eastern or Lower
Yangtze River
Geographical center: China
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
Mandarin is the most widely spoken of all Chinese languages/dialects and is used
by upwards of 720 million people in China, or 70 percent of the population of
China (Grimes 1992). It is spoken in a huge area of the mainland running
diagonally from the extreme southwest to Manchuria and also along the entire
east coast north of Shanghai. To generalize, most of China with the exception of
the southeastern provinces from Vietnam in the southwest to Shanghai in the
northeast is Mandarin speaking. Other exceptional areas are in the far west.
There are also non-Chinese speaking minorities in many areas of China.
Substantial numbers of
speakers are in Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Russia, the USA,
Mongolia, Vietnam, Brunei, South Africa, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Hong
Kong. The total number of speakers in approximately 885 million (Grimes 1994).
ORTHOGRAPHY
Mandarin is written in traditional Chinese characters, a system that developed
over 4,000 years ago. It utilizes a set of logographs of several types:
pictographs, ideographs, compound ideographs, loan characters, and phonetic
compounds. The latter forms over 90 percent of the total set of as many as
40,000 characters (Li and Thompson 1979, 1987). There is also an official
romanization called Pinyin. There are other systems but Pinyin, developed in the
1950s, has become widespread throughout China, and has received official
encouragement.
There is little connection between the written and spoken language: the Chinese
system of writing, for the most part, does not symbolize the spoken language.
Because it is ideographic, speakers of all Chinese languages/dialects,
regardless of the similarity of spoken form, can read and understand Chinese
writing and literature (for further information see the Cantonese Profile).
LINGUISTIC SKETCH
Chinese is predominantly an isolating language, meaning that for the most part
it is devoid of inflection, which characterizes many European languages
including English. Word order, particles, prepositions and discourse--rather
than a system of affixes attached to nouns or verbs--indicate grammatical
relations, that is, how the various constituents of a sentence interrelate.
Compared to other languages, word structure is also simple and uncomplicated,
with words consisting of one or two morphemes, and there are few inflectional
morphemes, such as those in other languages that indicate, for example, tense,
person, number, gender, and case.
There is some morphological complexity. Definite nouns may be overtly marked by
various modifiers but usually any sentential constituents before the verb are
considered as definite. Number also can be expressed by a suffix but only for
nouns indicating human beings and also obligatorily for personal pronouns;
otherwise it is ignored or shown by lexical means, e.g. a numeral. Modifiers
precede nouns.
Verbs can occur in compounds in which the second element indicates result or
direction. Tense is not indicated in verb phrases; instead there are particles
which are suffixed to the verb to indicate certain aspects, such as perfect,
durative, inchoative, and experiential.
There is also a set of particles which occur at the end of sentences; these
function, for example, to change declarative sentences into questions, to
produce commands or suggestions, and so on.
In Mandarin, compounding and derivational morphemes are common; thus, the
language is largely polysyllabic in word structure in contrast to Cantonese, for
example, where the characterization of "monosyllabic" is accurate.
The syntax is rather simple and uncomplicated but unusual from the standpoint of
English. Notions such as subject, direct and indirect object play no significant
role. Serial verb constructions in expressing subordinate relationships such as
purpose are the norm and there are no overt markers for indicating subordination
or coordination. The distinction between active and passive voice is often left
unmarked but there are prepositions which can be used to indicate agents.
Indirect objects in most cases are marked by a preposition and precede the verb.
Pronouns are remarkable in how infrequently they are used.
Mandarin is a tone language in which each stressed syllable has a significant
contrastive pitch which is an integral part of the syllable. All Chinese
languages/dialects have tone, but Mandarin has one of the simplest systems,
consisting of four basic tones (high level, high rising, dipping/falling, high
falling) in contrast to Cantonese, for example, with nine contrastive tones.
Morpheme structure in Chinese is relatively simple, for example, consonant
clusters are not tolerated and only a restricted number of consonants can occur
in syllable-final position.
ROLE IN SOCIETY
Mandarin, under the term "Putonghua" is the official language of the
People's Republic of China. It is also the official language of Taiwan, where it
is called Guoyu, and is one of the official languages of Singapore where it is
referred to as Huayu. All of the official standards are based on the Beijing
dialect. The term Mandarin itself derives from a Beijing expression, which means
"officials' language." Since Mandarin, in the guise of Modern Standard
Chinese, was adopted in 1956 as the officially sanctioned language for the
nation, it has been actively and zealously promoted through the media of
education, broadcasting, television, and the press. It is steadily making
inroads in traditional non-Mandarin areas, especially as a written language.
HISTORY
Three periods in the history of Chinese can be distinguished: Preclassical from
1500 to 500BC; Classical from 500BC to 200AD; and Postclassical from 200AD to
the present.
The earliest attestations date from the first period, in the form of
inscriptions on bone and tortoise shell; they are in the form of short oracle
inscriptions; later on they were done on bronze. Also from later in this period
there is an anthology of 305 poems, called the Shijing (The Book of Songs, or
Classic of Poetry) from which scholars have been able to infer much about the
structure and form of the language from that period.
The Classical period begins with the earliest writings of Confucius and ends
with the Han dynasty (206BC - 220AD). Many prose works dating from this time
exist. The language of the postclassical period was modeled on that of the
Classical period, but in the meantime the vernaculars had evolved to the point
that the writing of this period when read aloud was not comprehensible.
Nevertheless it continued as a form used by administrators, scholars and the
literate and some of the greatest literature of the Tang dynasty (618 to 907)
and neo-Confucian works were produced during this period. This style endured
into the first half of the twentieth century when there was a reaction against
some of the highly stylized literature of the various historical periods. In the
early years of the twentieth century serious efforts were undertaken to provide
the masses with a form of the language that could be understood by all. This
culminated in 1956 with the adoption of Modern Standard Chinese whose model for
pronunciation is the Beijing dialect of Mandarin, and for grammar the regional
variant of Northern Mandarin, and for its lexicon the modern vernacular
literature. Part of the reform movement included the simplification of the
traditional characters and the formation and dissemination of a phonetic
alphabet, known as Pinyin. Both were motivated by the desire to eliminate
illiteracy.
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《汉语拼音》 |
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Our Chinese mandarin
Course has 3 different levels, and each level is 2 months training.
After completion of this training, all students will expect to
communicate in Intermediate level Mandarin.