Wednesday, June 11, 2008

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 1st October 2007, 12:46 PM

Replies: 2

Subscribed threads

Views: 581

Posted By roddy

Re: Subscribed threads

You posted, were automatically subscribed, and then you deleted it. Deleting your post from the
thread does not remove the subscription, but you can do that via the user control panel yourself.
Bet...

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

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 1st April 2008, 12:33 PM

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Database Error

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Posted By ipsi()

回复: Database Error

Woot. Hadn't realised it was quite so common. :oops:

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 1st April 2008, 12:10 PM

Replies: 27

Database Error

Views: 1,837

Posted By ipsi()

Database Error?

http://www. From Beijing Chinese School.php is giving me a Database Error when trying to load it.
Weirdly, this page, and the front page both work fine. In fact, everywhere works fine except the
main...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Search Forums

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Forum: Other cultures and language 30th September 2007, 01:19 PM

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Historical Vietnamese Phonology? / Japanese pre-War newspaper articles?

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Posted By Xi'Er Dun

Historical Vietnamese Phonology? / Japanese pre-War newspaper articles?

Are there any online sources with information of Historical Vietnamese Phonology, ie. there must
have been proto-Vietnamese/archaic-Vietnamese/old-Vietnamese,/Ancient Vietnamese/Middle Vietnamese
and...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 1st January 2008, 10:40 PM

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What other languages do we speak

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Posted By usna_mori

Re: What other languages do we speak

My mother language is spanish , I´ve been studying japanese for 2 years , chinene for 1 and
korean for a few months , I´m fluent in english =)

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Chinese Online Class - 太不像话了! - meaning? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Grammar and Vocabulary

太不像话了! - meaning?
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Scoobyqueen -

Does this expression mean something along the lines of: "lack of respect" or "offensive". The
dictionary give the definition of "what a shame that.." but it does not quite seem to fit the
context.

Any comment on its use and how common the expression is would be welcome.

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semantic nuance -

It depends. But what you said here is one of the possibilities. Consider 'way out of line'
for太不像話了!! I think this expression is quite common.

Hope it helps!

roddy -

Yeah - out of line, out of order (in Britain anyway), unreasonable. Which dictionary gave you that
definition?

Scoobyqueen -

Thanks for the explanations which fit the context. I used dict.cn and just typed in the expression
for a search.

HashiriKata -

Quote:

I used dict.cn and just typed in the expression for a search

If you typed in just 不像话, you'd get a more accurate response.

zhudianyao -

It usually expresses a little angry or disagreement

tooironic -

Usually translates as 'that's outrageous!'.

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Learn to speak Chinese - How have Classical Chinese negative elements (e.g. 否、無) preserved in dialects? -

From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Non-Mandarin Chinese
How have Classical Chinese negative elements (e.g. 否、無) preserved in dialects?
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ipsi() -

As part of my study of Classical Chinese, I'm looking into how the various negative elements in
Classical Chinese (e.g. 不、非、否、弗、莫、未、勿、etc) have been preserved in
Chinese dialects. This is not exactly an in-depth or detailed essay. I'm just looking for a brief
overview, basically. Word length is 1500 words, and I'm also trying to incorporate something about
how they're still used in public signs and the like, and why (which is getting posted to another
topic elsewhere). This only relates to the use of negative elements, other bits are only going to
be included if they're relevant.

If anyone can give me any help, that would be great. It's also due Friday... (I've been slack).
Suggested readings would be great too.

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ipsi() -

It's a little depressing that this is the top result on Google for this sort of thing.

roddy -

On public signs - about 1,000 or so of the photos on signese.com are searchable, so you could find
examples of usage that way - ie for 无.

it's a start

ipsi() -

Thanks - I hadn't realised some were searchable .

Also, this may help some people (if they ever end up with the same question):

https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/dsp.../1/349_016.pdf - it's an old discussion (with toneless
romanisation only ), discussing some aspects of negation in Mandarin, Cantonese, and Taiwanese,
which is going to help me a bit.

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - tattoo - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

tattoo
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floridabiged -

I would like to know the symbols for a tattoo of my wifes name LINDA AND WHAT THE MEANING IN
CHINESE IS THANK YOU EDWARD

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renzhe -

They're not symbols, they are written characters of a language. You cannot write poetry or essays
using symbols.

There are various ways to transcribe "Linda" by picking random characters that sound roughly
similar. For example: 林娜 (lin na). The first character actually means "forest", the second one
means "graceful". But since this is a transcribed name, most people wouldn't read anything into
it, and accept it as a transliteration. Many native Chinese speakers might not even recognise
which name you were trying to transcribe.

Tattooing someone's name "in Chinese" is dangerous, because you're tattooing some random stuff
that might sound roughly similar to what the name actually sounds like. The name "Linda" actually
has a Spanish meaning: "cute" or "sweet", the Chinese transliteration is just an approximation of
the sound that neither sounds like the real name, nor carries the same meaning.

I'd suggest picking a beautiful font and simply tattooing "Linda" instead.

imron -

Also, please have a read of this and this to familiarize yourself with the issues involved in
converting non-Chinese names into Chinese characters.

jfranco -

Also a Chinese character can mean different things in different contexts and a single character
can often be ambiguous. I have seen women who have had the character 信, which can mean many
things. It can mean simple an article of mail as in 寄信 (ji xin - send letter) or belief as in
信赖 (xin lai - trust/have faith in).

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Chinese Course - Looking for Classmates for a small Online Oral Chinese class - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

Looking for Classmates for a small Online Oral Chinese class
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simonlaing -

Part 1
Hi all,

I am an upper-intermediate student with large vocabulary but occasional tone issues. I am
currently doing tutoring twice a week (usually mondays and wednesday nights at 7 or with a tutor.
However I have found that it would better if I had a classmate to compete against and give each
other reciprocal pressure to study hard.

I tested this online classroom and the quality seemed to be good though there were occasional
issues of lag.

The book I am using is call A course in Chinese Colloquial Idioms 汉语口语习惯用语教程,
by Beijing language and culture University Press. We will also have PPT presentation to guide us
through the class. example of some of the sentences 这次考试考砸了. (I got a crap score on
the last test)
or 我现在干什么都打不起精神来 ( not in high spirits, depressed.) There are also two
business books that we use on an off.

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simonlaing -

Part 2
The class is 1 hour and I am paying the tutor at the moment. (perhaps if you like it you can share
the cost later)

I think because of band width issues and talking time the class will be limited to max 4 people or
so.

The texts are interesting too.
So if you have questions or want to join write on this thread of send me a Private message.

have fun,
Simon

P.S. (I also arrange people to get Chinese tutors, but this class is for other upper intermediate
classmates to study with)

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese Online Class - First Episodes 2: 空镜子, Empty Mirror - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Chinese Culture > Films and Television > Chinese TV Shows - The First Episode

Project
First Episodes 2: 空镜子, Empty Mirror
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roddy -

Being a part of the First Episode Project.
6th April: 空镜子. Two sisters in Beijing fall in love, fall out of love, marry, etc. Though
not to each other.
Emule (RMVB); Torrent (couldn't find, anyone?); Youtube?; Youku.

Round Two!

Watched the first episode of this yesterday, although I've seen the whole thing before, last
summer. The first episode basically introduces pretty much all of the characters we'll meet - the
人见人爱 elder sister 孙俪, her younger sister 孙燕 who lives in her shadow, the parents.
马黎明, who lives in the same courtyard as the family, and is 孙俪's childhood - and he hopes
current - sweetheart, 张波, the less handsome, better-careered rival for her affections, and
潘树林, a potential boyfriend for 孙燕, introduced by her colleague 周师傅.

It's a slow-paced episode that gives the character room to breathe, and there are a couple of
really nice family scenes where the parents' characters come across really well I think. Locations
are also nice - 大杂院 living, running into people in the hutongs, taking a bus out to 爬山 -
very very Beijing.

Certainly doesn't throw unexpected plot twists at you, just sets up the characters you'll follow
through the series.

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imron -

Just watched the first episode of this now. It's interesting enough that I'll probably watch a
couple more. Don't know where I'll find the time though...

mythia -

I really love this series. I think I bought the book, too . . .

imron -

Ok, I just finished watching this, and would definitely recommend it to others. A good range of
characters including both likeable and loathable ones, plus it's all just everyday life and so the
language used is pretty easy to follow. Out of all series in the first episode project I've seen
so far, this is probably my second favourite (after 武林外传).

renzhe -

I liked it. The beginning was unexpectedly difficult language-wise, but it got much easier after
the first 10 minutes or so. Still, it surprised me with some words I couldn't find in any of my
dictionaries. Most of the time, though, the meaning can be understood even without looking them up.

I like the fact that it's really authentic, with believable, everyday people, and it has a
distinct melancholic Beijing feel to it. The conversations are easy to follow, this is a very good
option for beginners to start exploring Chinese TV shows.

I don't know if I can really get into the story of two sisters looking for love, but the things I
mentioned are strong arguments for watching a few more episodes.

Here is a vocabulary list I made while watching. I included a lot of beginner and
lower-intermediate words that may be helpful for beginners, and also some words which were used in
a context I didn't know before. Advanced learners don't need to bother.

吹 chuī break up
亲 qīn dear, to kiss
当傻 dāng shǎ play stupid
单位 dān wèi unit
假日 jià rì holiday, non-working day
讨厌 tǎo yàn disgusting
权利 quán lì (a) right
管 guǎn to control, be concerned with
逛街 guàng jiē to stroll, do window-shopping
马来西亚 mǎ lái xī yà Malaysia
发火 fā huǒ ignite, get angry
废话 fèi huà superfluous talk, nonsense
炉子 lú zi stove, oven
加煤 jiā méi add coal
啥 shá (dialect) what?
纯粹 chún cuì purely
喇叭 lǎ ba loudspeaker, trumpet
蜂窝 fēng wō beehive
不配 bù pèi doesn't deserve
仓库 cāng kù warehouse
保管员 bǎo guǎn yuán storeroom clerk
瞎说 xiā shuō talk drivel
胡说 hú shuō talk drivel
后勤 hòu qín logistics
记性 jì xing memory capability
俗话 sú huà proverb
矬 cuó short (???)
可逗 kĕ dòu charming
世界名著 shì jiè míng zhù world famous masterpiece
遗憾 yí hàn regret, pity
闺女 guī nü maiden, unmarried daughter
嘟噜 dū lū mutter, mumble (???)
坯 pī unfinished product
嫌烦 xián fan bother
真心 zhēn xīn sincere
长得 zhǎng de looks
蚂蚁 mǎ yǐ ant
茫 máng vague, vast
概率 gài lǜ probability
锺情 zhōng qíng madly in love
嫌弃 xián qì avoid, stay away from
揍 zòu beat up

roddy -

Yeah, I think of all the shows we've looked at so far, this might be the best option for someone
wanting to watch a complete series - the language is managable but won't be completely easy, it's
a reasonable length, and it maintains levels of quality right the way through. Off the top of my
head I think myself, gougou and imron have all completed it and enjoyed it - not sure about anyone
else.

imron -

Yeah, I'd probably agree with that. It's a short series, the language is quite easy to follow, and
it's all pretty much everyday stuff. No time-travelling techno-babble or gangster-speak.

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Chinese Mandarin - BNU: Fall 2008 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Universities and Schools > Studying

Chinese in Beijing
BNU: Fall 2008
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klishe -

Evening, scamps. I see that the BLCU has its own thread and I think the BNU is equally deserving.
So... who's off to study Mandarin in September? Anyone?

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extrapages -

I'll still be around... and definitely open to helping any people that'll be new to beijing.

klishe -

Hey Pages

I guess there's not that many BNU people here. Just a quickie. If I'm applying to start at the BNU
in September, when am I expected to be in Beijing to sort out accommodation and registration. I
can't seem to find the answer anywhere, maybe I'm missing something.

I hope you see this! Thanks muchly.

extrapages -

klishe,
im not definitely sure but this is the schedule we followed for 2007-2008:
and registration was the day before the entrance test...
so im thinking maybe beginning of september?
I flew into the beijing on sept 2.

---
FALL SEMESTER 2007
entrance test: sept 4
first day of class: sept 10
mid terms: nov 15,16
last day of class/finals: jan 14,15
---
SPRING SEMESTER 2008
entrance test: feb 20
first day of class: feb 25
mid terms: april 17-18
last day of class/finals: june 9-10

klishe -

Thanks, Pages. That's a great help. I'm sending the application off tomorrow, maybe I'll see you
around.

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Cantonese-English dictionary - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Non-Mandarin Chinese

Cantonese-English dictionary
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L-F-J -

Hi everyone! I've just signed up after reading around a bit. This site seems great!

I learned some Mandarin and have maybe an intermediate level with it. I'm now trying to learn a
bit of Cantonese. I learned basic things so far but I'd like to catch it up with my Mandarin.

I've been searching online for a good Cantonese-English dictionary. All I ever find are sites that
show Mandarin and Cantonese together and if I type in "to be" in English it will come up with
"shi" in Mandarin and "si" in Cantonese. But as I have learned Cantonese only uses this is written
language. The spoken Cantonese word would be "hai". So, I'm looking for a dictionary that gives
correct spoken Cantonese words. Any help?

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amego -

Hmmm sorry but i only have this site, which lists the spoken (colloquial) Cantonese words. Hope it
will be of help to you.

P.S. Take note that the "j-" sounds are actually "y-".

wai ming -

It's a work in progress, but CantoDict http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/scripts/wordlist.htm
emphasises spoken Cantonese, as well as including Mandarin equivalents and words used in written
Chinese. New entries are constantly being added.

As with the site amego mentioned, "j" is pronounced as "y" since Jyutping is used as the
romanisation standard.

Hope that helps!

rose~ -

I also need a paper dictionary, English-Chinese or Chinese-English as long as it gives the
Cantonese pronunciation in a recognized system like Yale romanization. I did buy the
郎文初級中文詞典 but it only uses the international phonetic alphabet and gives the
romanization for the single chracter only not the word.

skylee -

I recommended this Longman dictionary 2 years ago and I still think that it is good. (I have two
for myself, one at home and one at office, and have bought one for my niece.) It is a
Chinese-Chinese dictionary, though, but with with Cantonese pronunciations.

rose~ -

Thanks Skylee. Oh, it's a shame I didn't buy the 高級版.

May I ask, what kind of romanization does that version have?

skylee -

For mandarin, there are both hanyu pinyin and bopomofo. For Cantonese, 黃錫淩式音標 is used.
There is hanyu pinyin for each compound word/chengyu listed, but bopomofo and cantonese
romanisation are only listed for the headwords. Oh and the dictionary is in traditional characters.

~dan~ -

ok um basically does anybody know where i can learn cantonese for free and it is done simply. so
basically if i looked for the word "hello" isntead of coming up in symbols it coming up as it does
in some dictionaries where its like: beautiful(byu-ti-ful)
that sort of thing

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Chinese Lesson - The difference between 'q' and 'ch' - Page 3 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening

The difference between 'q' and 'ch'
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Page 3 of 3 < 12 3

Jose -

Quote:

This is because they are two completely different sounds, made in different places in the mouth. I
can't imagine anyone with good Chinese, be they native or not, pronouncing these two the same way.
They might be related, but so are, for example, p, k and t, yet no one with decent English (Dutch,
Spanish, etc) would mix them up.

I am not arguing against how different they are, only stating that they have limited distinctive
value, and that is a very important criterion to know how much margin for mispronunciation you
have before you're misunderstood. Jerry Norman's "Chinese" has a short section (page 140) about
the disputed phonemic status of the palatals in Mandarin Chinese. You will not find anyone
disputing the phonemic status of p, k and t in Chinese or in any European language. Whether two
sounds are allophones or distinct phonemes does not depend on how much their points of
articulation differ, but on whether any minimal pairs can be found that are distinguished solely
because of either sound being used. For example, in English, the difference between the two
consonants /d/ and /ð/ is essential, as "day" and "they" are different words, but much less so in
Spanish, where the two sounds exist as variants of the "d" phoneme (and native speakers are not
even aware that there is a difference). You can pronounce a word like "candado" as /kan'dado/ and
you will sound fine (just a tad foreign) even if native speakers say something like /kaŋ'daðo/.

Anyway, I'm deviating too much from the original question. I only wanted to point out that when we
start to learn Chinese we may spend too much time trying to understand the difference between
"chu" and "qu" as a difference in the initial consonant, and it helps if you're aware that "qu" is
pronounced with the ü vowel. Because few consonants can occur in front of that vowel, if you get
the vowel and the tone right you will be understood, even if your "q" is not palatal enough. But,
of course, if you learn to produce a nice aspirated and palatal consonant, that will be much much
better.

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atitarev -

Jose,

I also agree with other posters that the distinction is very important, much more important than
your example in Spanish. Dialect speakers may mix shi/si, chi/ci, zhi/zi but never palatalized
with unpalatalised (qi/chi) or aspirated with unaspirated (qi/ji). This mix sound very foreign and
wrong, besides, not close enough to be understood in many cases. Try saying "7-8" in Mandarin
without palatalisation, you'll know what I mean.

Europeans have no problems picking up the difference between si/shi but usually have more
difficulties with qi/chi or qi/ji, whereas dialect speakers or speakers of some Asian countries
have the reverse.

I am one of the fans of Hanyu Pinyin system and I think it's a very good system, if it's
understood and used properly (Pinyin must be learned in combination with the Chinese phonetics).

Lu -

Quote:

if you get the vowel and the tone right you will be understood, even if your "q" is not palatal
enough. But, of course, if you learn to produce a nice aspirated and palatal consonant, that will
be much much better.

Again, getting it approximately right is fine if you just want to learn some quick Chinese for a
holiday, but if the OP is serious in learning Chinese, I think it's a very bad idea to start out
with only getting it chabuduo right. It'll be much harder to correct in the future.
Btw, sure if you get the vowel and the tone right you'll likely be understood, but many English
speakers have trouble with exactly that u, let alone tones.
I think the best thing the OP can do is find him/herself a native speaker to explain this sound.

leosmith -

Quote:

I am not arguing against how different they are, only stating that they have limited distinctive
value, and that is a very important criterion to know how much margin for mispronunciation you
have before you're misunderstood.

If you don't distinguish between the two, you will not be well understood, perhaps not understood
at all. You would know this if you actually tried it, right?

I agree with the others - a combo of Sinosplice, FSI, and Mandarin Chinese Phonetics will explain
it. For a summary:
1. to make the q sound, your tongue needs to be in the e (as in "eel") position. Without changing
its location, try to make a ch sound like in english.
2. to make the ch sound, your tongue needs to be in the ch (as in "churn") position. Without
changing its location, try to make a ch sound like in english.

Prase -

jose: Even if the theory is correct, (I think it isn't) how can you know that s/q/j are allophones
to sh/ch/zh and not to h/k/g or s/c/z?

here2learn -

Wow, plenty here about where to put your tongue.

I thought I had nothing left to contribute, BUT....

No one has mentioned our sexy lips.

Really... to make CH SH in English we pull the sides of our lips/cheeks in a bit. In chinese we
rarely do this. Relax the cheeks and mouth/lips, they may feel awkwardly "wide" at first, but
don't force them into anything, just relax them; don't pucker or pull them inward at all.

This goes for all the q,j,x, ch,sh,zh and probably more sounds. English has a lot of cheek
movement; chinese doesn't.

When I was learning French my cheeks often got tired; they should not get tired in Mandarin or
you're doing something wrong.

LaVandez -

Great stuff here but I get lost in this stuff on palatials and allophones. I think some of this
stuff has to be able to be explained in an easier less technical way so I do like it when there
are approximations but for me in this case I try to imagine exactly what is going on and I still
don't know if I quite get it.

leosmith -

Quote:

1. to make the q sound, your tongue needs to be in the e (as in "eel") position. Without changing
its location, try to make a ch sound like in english.
2. to make the ch sound, your tongue needs to be in the ch (as in "churn") position. Without
changing its location, try to make a ch sound like in english.

Quote:

Great stuff here but I get lost in this stuff on palatials and allophones. I think some of this
stuff has to be able to be explained in an easier less technical way so I do like it when there
are approximations but for me in this case I try to imagine exactly what is going on and I still
don't know if I quite get it.

Still don't get it?

Prase -

To get x, try to pronounce english sh while touching your lower teeth with your tongue. As sh
cannot be pronounced with the tongue in this position, you should get x.
To get pinyin sh, try to pronounce sh with the tongue curled back. Or you may try this:
http://www. From Beijing Chinese School/showthread.php?t=22844

Then it shouldn't be too much difficult to get q and j from x and zh and ch from sh.

However, it is absolutely necessary you can distinguish them in speech of natives first. Otherwise
you will not be able to recognise if you pronounce them correctly or not. You would be like a deaf
man who is trying to learn to speak.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Chinese Class - Traditional Support - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > Adsotrans.com Forum

Traditional Support
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trevelyan -

We've fixed the issues with automatic traditional character recognition that character pointed out
in another thread. The updated code (and database) is available for download. Anything from
version v5-022 should work:

http://adsotrans.com/downloads/adso-v5.022.tar.gz

Have also edited our "advanced editing page" so that traditional characters can be edited. Right
now we will fail to parse traditional words if they do not exist in our database, even if the
simplified counterpart does. All about maintaining the integrity of the database.

Suggestions on how to improve the system for users/contributors who want to deal mostly with
traditional Chinese are welcome. Do we need separate editing and annotating pages? I'm not sure
but would like to make whatever changes are necessary to get the fanti crowd more involved.

More details on the Adso blog.

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character -

Quote:

Right now we will fail to parse traditional words if they do not exist in our database, even if
the simplified counterpart does. All about maintaining the integrity of the database.

Automatic conversion seems dauntingly difficult: http://www.cjk.org/cjk/c2c/c2cbasis.htm

I guess the internet could be harnessed to see if traditional "matches" exist for simplified
phrases. The results could be reviewed before inclusion in Adso.

trevelyan -

The academic team at ChinesePod is using some Adso-related tools to help with lesson preparation,
which is helping us flag some of the issues that still exist with duoyinci and pushing forward the
project.

Manual review is definitely critical. The best solution is really to find some people who are
interested in this sort of thing and are coming at text analysis from a fanti perspective. Then
religiously fixing the problems they complain about.

character -

Quote:

Then religiously fixing the problems they complain about.

Going entirely to apache licensing would be favorite.

---------------

./adso -f file1.txt --code --extra-code "<REDUCE> AND <PRINT chinese><PRINT / ><PRINT
chinese_utf8s><PRINT / ><PRINT chinese_utf8c><PRINT / ><PRINT english><PRINT / ><PRINT
pinyin><PRINT / ><PRINT myclass><PRINT newline>" > file2.txt

This produces an empty file. Do I need to be using the non-latin database for this to work?

Until this is fixed, is there any chance of an enhanced vocab mode which includes the pinyin in
addition to everything else it outputs?

-----------------

./adso -f file1.txt -ie utf8 -is traditional -oe utf8 -os traditional --vocab > file2.txt

1) Wenlin says file2.txt has ~1200 UTF-8 format violations
2) Wenlin seems to be saying that the "U+3000 Ideographic space" in the input is processed into
"U+FFFD Replacement character" (which displays as a control character).

trevelyan -

I'm generally happy to let people use the adso materials commercially provided they attribute the
materials and contribute back to the project. I don't think it's onerous to send an email asking
for permission.

On the traditional side, can you mail me the file you're using so that I can take a look at it
myself. email address is david.lancashire at google.com. I think the command is working for me so
I'd like to replicate things exactly. You are compiling from source right?

trevelyan -

Thanks to pressure from Mark at toshuo.com, the annotation engine is now outputting popups in
traditional characters (when input is traditional characters). Will be working on hooking up the
editing functionality for the traditional stuff later this week and will post when that's done.

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Learn to speak Chinese - Downloadable dictionary file? - Page 2 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > Adsotrans.com Forum

Downloadable dictionary file?
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wulong -

Here's a zipped CSV file that I extracted from the latest development database. Format is

simplified,traditional,pinyin,english

http://e.den.li/adso-csv.zip (2.3M)

Hope this helps.

PS. Here's the same data but in a single sqlite table:

http://e.den.li/adso.single.db.gz (6.8M)

Schema:

Code:

CREATE TABLE entries (
      id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
      simp TEXT UNIQUE,
      trad TEXT UNIQUE,
      pinyin TEXT UNIQUE,
      english TEXT
    );

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woliveri -

Thanks Wulong,

I have two problems.

1. Excel cannot open the entire and so I sucked it into Access and because the delimiters ( | )
don't seem to be consistant so I have pinyin together with characters in some rows and others are
ok.

2. The other file, single table with all data, appears not to be a valid archive.

trevelyan -

My laptop got tanked by a QQ install last week, which has stopped Adso-related work until I can
get it fixed. I'll take a look at those corrupted tables when I'm back up and running.

I don't see why you can't dump in CEDICT format if you want. Part of the point of the database
release is that it should be relatively simple to reformat data. The easiest way to access most of
the data is to look at the table ("expanded_unified"). The SQL command "SELECT * from
expanded_unified" will get you most of what you need.

The hard way of doing things is to look up the first character in the table character_index
("GB2312") or index_utf8s (simplified). The pkey in those tables corresponds to the table number
containing all entries beginning with that character. If a character is listed in the index with a
pkey of 84, for instance, all words starting with that character will be found in table _84.

woliveri -

Hi Trevelyan,

Thanks for the reply. It seems expanded_unified contains Chinese and Pinyin but no English.

This is the query:

Questions:
1. how do I get the English translation

Thanks,

Bill

wulong -

Quote:

1. Excel cannot open the entire and so I sucked it into Access and because the delimiters ( | )
don't seem to be consistant so I have pinyin together with characters in some rows and others are
ok.

That's a dump directly from sqlite. You might have to fixup a few rows to get it to work.

Quote:

2. The other file, single table with all data, appears not to be a valid archive.

It's a gzip file. You need to use WinZip or WinRAR if you're in Windows. If you're on Mac OS X, it
should be built in.

Quote:

I don't see why you can't dump in CEDICT format if you want. Part of the point of the database
release is that it should be relatively simple to reformat data. The easiest way to access most of
the data is to look at the table ("expanded_unified"). The SQL command "SELECT * from
expanded_unified" will get you most of what you need.

I don't even see expanded_unified. Can you point me to the archive that has the database with this
table?

What I need is a simple list (simplified, traditional, pinyin, english) similar to what cedict
gives. The database I have doesn't make it easy to do this which is why I had to resort to using
ruby in order to pull everything together.

woliveri -

wulong,

Yes, I have Winzip but it fails to open the archive saying it's corrupt or other error.

I'm using SQLite Maestro to view the tables (see the above graphic in my previous post), Seems
like a nice application but still cannot export to file without having memory errors or other
issues.

http://www.sqlmaestro.com/products/sqlite/maestro/

wulong -

@woliveri

Hmm... haven't used Windows in awhile, but I remember running into issues with winzip and plain
gzip files. Here's a zip file for you: http://e.den.li/adso.single.zip

Hopefully this one works better.

If you've installed sqlite3, you can get a dump file from the command line:

Code:

C:\path>sqlite adso.single.db
sqlite> .separator ,
sqlite> .output adso.csv
sqlite> select * from entries;
sqlite> .quit

There will be a new file called adso.csv in the same directory you started sqlite.

perjp -

Wulong, the schema for the sqlite database seems to be incorrect:

Code:

CREATE TABLE entries (
      id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
      simp TEXT UNIQUE,
      trad TEXT UNIQUE,
      pinyin TEXT UNIQUE,
      english TEXT
    );

The UNIQUE tags should not be there.
In the current table, there is only one entry with the pronounciation a1, which can't be correct.
The csv file has the same problem.

I've tried several times to access the download site http://www.adsotate.com/downloads/ but i've
never been successful. Is there any other way of accessing the raw data file?

trevelyan -

There will be a new release in a matter of days: database plus software plus several months of
updates. In the meantime, an older version is still online at:

http://www.adsotrans.com/downloads/

The adsotate.com server had technical problems and is offline..

ABCinChina -

First of all, I would like to thank Trevelyan for putting together such a useful dictionary which
help me in reading online text as well as my work translations.

Is it just me, or is the current database down? I need to create a PHP script that connects to the
database and reformats the data to the format I need. I've downloaded sqlite3 & sqlite maestro and
need some tips on how to get them to dump in the needed format since I can't seem to access this
script. http://adsotrans.com/downloads/v5/php_script.txt Can somebody please give me some pointers?

Here's what I'm trying to do. Ideally, I would like to import the full Traditional and Simplified
database into Kingsoft Powerword 2007 which accepts .txt files in ANSI format that looks like the
example below.

乾淨|[gan1 jing4]\r\nclean\r\ntidy\r\nneat\r\n <--format

Ends up looking like this...
乾淨 <-- lookup word
[gan1 jing4] <-- pinyin & definitions
clean
tidy
neat

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Chinese name - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Tattoos, Chinese Names and Quick Translations

Chinese name
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lproxster -

i received my Chinese name from my Chinese teacher, except i have no idea what it means. I've
tried searching for it, but nothing comes up (name translator).

can anyone help me translate it? please and thnx!

Chinese name: Li3 Yu2 Hui4

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gougou -

Do you have the characters? Without them, nobody will be able to tell you for certain.

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Speak Chinese - Distribution - November 2006 - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Learning Chinese > Chinese Computing and Technology > Adsotrans.com Forum

Distribution - November 2006
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trevelyan -

Just a ping to let people know that the latest database release has been uploaded to the site.
This brings us to somewhere around 182,000 entries in the backend Adso database and comes with the
last two months or so of database edits and corrections. Since database releases are spaced about
2 months apart now the chances are that this will be the latest release for the year.

If you already know where to go and get this file, you are set. If you don't know, you are DOOMED
to either (1) guessing where this file is hosted or, (2) writing me an email asking for the
location of the download directory. Chances are I will tell you. The reason I want people to write
me first has mostly to do with reinforcing the idea among dictionary users that there is actually
human effort involved in maintaining and running this project. Free dictionaries are cool. But
free dictionaries that are socially supported are even cooler and more useful.

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trevelyan -

Latest release up at the usual place. Thanks as always to everyone who has contributed or
corrected entries over the last two months. It is appreciated, and we are slowly making progress.

zozzen -

it's a few months after you made this announcement, but i really really appreciate it and couldn't
help making a post to say thank you.

I always dream of making some Chinese related material open for every learner. Hope that I can
follow your suit soon.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Chinese Studies - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Guide to Hong Kong (香港)

Thread: Guide to Hong Kong (香港)
View Single Post

  #1 

Guide to Hong Kong (香港)

[top]Accommodation

Hong Kong can be very expensive when it comes to hotels. For guest houses in the HK$200-300
(US$25-40) you may find this links helpful:

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/accommod...tion/hong-kong
http://www.hostels.com/en/hk.html

[top]Bookstores

* The Commercial Press Bookstore (商務印書館星光圖書中心) Kowloon TST Miramar
  Shopping Center, second floor (九龍尖沙咀彌敦道 118-130 號美麗華酒店商場 2 樓
  AR 313 號舖) (the best place to go for Chinese books)
* Page One Bookstore (葉壹堂) - 9th Floor, Times Square; (other branches in Harbour City, or
  Fesitval Walk) (good selection of English-language books)
* Coffee Book, address 半山区柏道10号地下, telephone 2559 5199 (good selection of used
  English-language books, with some Chinese; close to King's College)
* 樂文書店 - 1st Floor, 506 Lockhart Road (many small book shops along that section of the
  road, i.e. behind Sogo)
* Cosmos Books (天地圖書) - 30 Johnston Road, Wanchai
* And there are also many small/old book stores on the 1st Floor of buildings along Sai Yeung
  Choi Street around Mongkok MTR station.

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

Contributors: flameproof, muyongshi, gato
Created by muyongshi, 9th October 2007 at 06:52 PM
Last edited by flameproof, 25th October 2007 at 10:21 AM
0 Comments , 906 Views

Discussion

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 8th March 2008, 06:23 PM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By monto

Re: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

这个办法有效 —— This method is effective
这着儿管用 —— The trick works

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 8th March 2008, 06:10 PM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By monto

Re: How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Thank you both. It works, a little bit overworks. All the "unread" s became the "read"s.

So I decide it should be used when I ready to log out after surfing.

Forum: Bug Reports / Help 8th March 2008, 05:02 PM

Replies: 13

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Views: 472

Posted By monto

How to reduce the list of threads with unread posts

Hi, all,
When I click the "New Posts" link, there appears the lists, two lists, one is really of new posts,
but the other one appeared below the following sentence is not.

I wish this one...

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 30th September 2007, 01:19 PM

Replies: 3

Historical Vietnamese Phonology? / Japanese pre-War newspaper articles?

Views: 491

Posted By Xi'Er Dun

Historical Vietnamese Phonology? / Japanese pre-War newspaper articles?

Are there any online sources with information of Historical Vietnamese Phonology, ie. there must
have been proto-Vietnamese/archaic-Vietnamese/old-Vietnamese,/Ancient Vietnamese/Middle Vietnamese
and...

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Forum: Other cultures and language 1st January 2008, 10:40 PM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By usna_mori

Re: What other languages do we speak

My mother language is spanish , I´ve been studying japanese for 2 years , chinene for 1 and
korean for a few months , I´m fluent in english =)

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Learn Chinese online - From Beijing Chinese School - View Single Post - Buying Books In China

Thread: Buying Books In China
View Single Post

  #1 

Buying Books In China

There are numerous sources where you can buy books and other study material online. If you are in
China, there are plenty of online shops you can order from.

Amazon
Bookmall
DangDang

Plus many more.

For those not yet well into Chinese reading I suggest:

http://www.studychineseculture.com

It is in English, it does export overseas, and it's run by a member of this forum (hi Elina!)

Another alternative is checking eBay. There are a few ebay sellers that are heavily into Chinese
books. Some sell from China, some from other places. To name a few regular sellers shops:

http://stores.ebay.de/Chinesisch-lernen
http://stores.ebay.com/China-folk-collection
http://stores.ebay.com/HeyChinese
http://stores.ebay.com/IQChinese

I presume that those located in China can help you to get what you want if they don't have it
already.

For book shops in individual cities please check under "Living in China"

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

Contributors: flameproof, muyongshi, elina
Created by flameproof, 22nd March 2008 at 06:09 PM
Last edited by flameproof, 23rd March 2008 at 11:48 AM
5 Comments , 659 Views

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Friday, May 30, 2008

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Forum: Bug Reports / Help 3rd August 2005, 05:58 AM

Replies: 6

Where's the Quote Button Gone!!!!!

Views: 1,648

Posted By Glenn

I guess you can't just rely on people to delete...

I guess you can't just rely on people to delete the irrelevant passages from the message they're
quoting. :-? Anyway, lucky for me I know the quote tags. :D :wink:

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Forum: Forums Information 28th November 2005, 10:47 AM

Replies: 6

Attachments

Views: 1,967

Posted By Quest

慢慢来,不用急,记住要快就好。 谢谢你,活泼可爱的Admin.

慢慢来,不用急,记住要快就好。
谢谢你,活泼可爱的Admin.

Forum: Forums Information 28th November 2005, 08:59 AM

Replies: 6

Attachments

Views: 1,967

Posted By Quest

Admin, how come I don't see an upload option?

Admin, how come I don't see an upload option?

Forum: Forums Information 28th November 2005, 03:53 AM

Replies: 6

Attachments

Views: 1,967

Posted By Quest

Admin, can we upload avatars now?

Admin, can we upload avatars now?

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Forum: Other cultures and language 14th May 2008, 06:38 PM

Replies: 40

German

Views: 1,017

Posted By Lu

Re: German

Atitarev, thank you but I already know German. Learned it in middle school for five years, and at
that point spoke it better than English. It deteriorated a bit now, unfortunately, for lack of...

Forum: Other cultures and language 13th May 2008, 12:22 AM

Replies: 40

German

Views: 1,017

Posted By Lu

Re: German

Milsh is probably understandable enough, but a bit like saying 'sank you' in English.
The German -ch is maybe closer to the Chinese hard h-.

Anyway, jiayou!

Forum: Other cultures and language 2nd May 2008, 03:26 PM

Replies: 40

German

Views: 1,017

Posted By Lu

Re: German

The language that is the closest to English is Dutch (ok, Frisian, but Dutch is second closest),
and German is very similar to Dutch, so you're not that far from home with German.

I agree that...

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

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Forum: Other cultures and language 25th June 2006, 11:39 AM

Replies: 177

What other languages do we speak

Views: 22,984

Posted By zhonghuarising

Interesting mix of languages in this thread. As...

Interesting mix of languages in this thread. As for myself, I have studied Spanish, French,
Italian, Latin, Greek, Japanese, and Mandarin in addition to my native English. But being able to
speak...

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Special Banyan tree similar with a Chinese map

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  China Observer

�� RMB should not appreciate too fast - experts

�� Beijing's Xiushui Market in a dilemma: fakes still appear

�� Making the elderly in the countryside enjoy their life

  Photos

�� Poems written on dragonfly wings

�� Int'l children's drama show

�� A long long wedding dress

��Home>>

Special Banyan tree similar with a Chinese map

www.chinanews.cn 2006-07-18 10:36:50

There is a special giant Banyan tree with the shape similar with a
Chinese map in Guilin, a city of Guangxi Province, drawing lots of
citizens.

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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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Making the elderly in the countryside enjoy their life

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�� The housing prices remain unreasonable

�� Who can be the top of the car industry in China?

�� Teenagers spend 290 bln yuan annually - survey

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��Home>>China Observer

Making the elderly in the countryside enjoy their life

www.chinanews.cn 2006-07-11 16:08:43

Chinanews, Beijing, July 11 �C Zhao Meiwu is an 82-year-old woman living
in Xiangxiang County in Hunan province. She has brought up seven
children. However, now when she is well on in years, none of them are
willing to take care of her. In order to survive, she has to go to the
neighboring open market every day, collecting abandoned vegetable leaves
to cook a meal, or going to a restaurant to eat the leftovers. Without
receiving any money from her children, she finally sued her fourth and
fifth sons in court. Later, the kind mother withdrew her charge because
she was told that her sons might be sent to jail because of their failing
to provide support for her.
The People's Daily carried an article on the incident, saying that in
rural areas, many old people have a miserable life. Often suffering from
diseases, they are also abandoned by their children. This has now become
a social problem. Some people say that these children have failed to
fulfill their filial duty to their parents, and take on their legal
responsibilities to the elderly. They urge that these children should be
taught to be filial to their parents and treat their parents kindly. In
this way, all the elderly people in the countryside could be taken care
of and enjoy the rest of their life. In a sense, the suggestions made by
these people are helpful and could play a positive role in resolving the
problems of the elderly people in the countryside. However, as the
society is making progress, says the article, we need to broaden our mind
and think of a new way to solve the problem. While the traditional
Chinese idea of encouraging children to take care of their aging parents
might play a role in solving the problem, an improved social welfare
system will be a much better solution.
In a family, parents have an obligation to raise their children when they
are young. In return, when kids grow up, they also have the duty to
support their parents when they get old. For a government, every citizen
has the obligation to pay tax to the state and in return, citizens also
enjoy the welfare benefits provided by the state. When people have a
right to do something, they also have a liability in doing it. Similarly,
the state revenue should be collected from the people and used by the
people.
At any time in Chinese history, Chinese farmers have made great
contribution to the state��s construction. In return, the government
should provide them with more welfare benefits. And among all, the
pension system and medical insurance system should always be included.
As China��s national strength increases, people hope to see that a public
fiscal system can be set up in China��s rural areas and Chinese farmers
will be covered by a good welfare system. While most Chinese farmers
today still rely on the traditional idea of bringing up children to
provide against old age, a good welfare system in society can help them
fulfill their wish in a better way. Through these two channels, it is
hoped that the problem of taking care of the old in rural areas can be
solved comprehensively and more effectively.

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 Chinese - Relics of Chinese civilization found along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway

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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>>China Travelling

Relics of Chinese civilization found along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-29 15:55:43

Chinanews, Xining, June 29 - Archaeologists discovered that early in the
later period of the Paleolithic Age, there were ancient human activities
along the Qinghai-Tibet railway line. They found relics of human
activities during this period in the Tuotuo River at the Thanglha
mountain district, Hol Xil and the Small Tsaidam Lake at Tsaidam Basin
and gathered large quantities of manually forged stone products,
including stone kernels, stone knives, choppers, scrapers and spikes.
They estimated that human beings had been living here no later than
30,000 years ago.
Xu Xinguo, director of the Qinghai Provincial Institute of Cultural
Relics and Archaeology, stated that during the preliminary phase of the
construction of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, he had been responsible for
the investigation group of cultural relics along the Qinghai-Tibet
railway line and had led a team to carry out general survey on cultural
relics at the building site of the Shanchahe-bridge section of the
Qinghai-Tibet railroad in Golmud city, Qinghai province, which is located
at the north side of the Kunlun Mountains, over 70 kilometers away. They
excavated more than 30 cultural relics from the Neolithic Age, such as
gallets, stone knives and stone kernels.
He believed that "if similar cultural relics can be found in the
substrata layer, they can be used to explain the assumption that Chinese
ancestors had lived on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau 10,000 to 30,000 years
ago and further attest that the Kunlun Mountain is also an important
cradleland of Chinese civilization."
In Xining city, which is located at the eastern part of Qinghai province
and is the starting point of the Qinghai-Tibet railroad, a series of
archeological discoveries has caused archeologists to be increasingly
amazed at its richness in prehistoric cultural relics and its advanced
prehistoric culture. From the Xiaochaida site and Layihai site of the
Paleolithic Age to the Hulijia, Zongri, and Lajia sites of the Neolithic
Age, and the Nuomuhong cultural heritage of the Bronze Age, these
prehistoric relics are not only spread over large areas of the eastern
Qinghai province, but are also large in quantity and represent different
types of culture.

          ��Qinghai-Tibet railway ready for operation
          ��Views along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
          ��Construction of Qinghai-Tibet railway does not destroy local
religious sites
          ��China plans to build resorts along Qinghai-Tibet Railway
          ��China sets timetable for early running of Qinghai-Tibet
Railway
          ��Qinghai-Tibet Railway to have earthquake warning system
          ��Qinghai-Tibet Railway under examination
          ��Garbage train to run on Qinghai-Tibet railway
          ��Trains running on Qinghai-Tibet Rail Line ready for use
          ��Staff of Qinghai-Tibet Railway trained for better service
          ��Qinghai-Tibet Railway stations to start operation

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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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Chinese Lesson - National Museum set up hall of shadow play

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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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�� Hubei's folk music selected as intangible cultural heritage

�� National Museum set up hall of shadow play

�� The lotus in Liuzhou, Guangxi

��Home>>Photos

National Museum set up hall of shadow play

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-14 09:43:44

Pictured: a shadow play named "Monkey King's fights against Ox-King" was
staged by Xiangdong shadow play troupe from Hebei's Changli County at the
shadow play hall in the National Museum of China in Beijing. A shadow
play is an ancient form of story-telling and entertainment using opaque,
often articulated figures in front of an illuminated backdrop to create
the illusion of moving images.

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Learn mandarin - Embry underwear fashion show

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Embry underwear fashion show

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-09 14:39:31

In order to promote a new series of underwear, famous underwear brand
Embry Form held an underwear fashion show on June 8. A sexy model was
presenting the charm of fashionable underwear.

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Gold coin's auction price set new high

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Gold coin's auction price set new high

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-06 15:18:50

The China Guardian 2006 Spring Auctions held a special part of
"Collection of famous numismatician Ma Dingxiang, Banknotes and Coins" on
June 5, when a one-gold-dollar commemorative gold coin that featured the
portrait of Chang Tso-lin (1875-1928), General of the Army and the Navy
during the Modern Warfare in China in 1924-1925, came under the hammer
for a sky-high price of 3.19 million yuan (USD 398,750 including
commission), setting another world record in China's gold coin auctions.
This coin was made by a Tianjin mint in 1926. According to the collector,
only two or three such coins were produced at that time for the northeast
warlord Chang Tso-lin to appreciate. No similar coins have been found in
any museum or other collectors in the world and the only one that exists
becomes extraordinarily precious. Pictured: the obverse and reverse sides
of the gold coin.

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Chinese Class - Wedding-Dress Expo to open in Hong Kong

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Wedding-Dress Expo to open in Hong Kong

www.chinanews.cn 2006-06-01 16:19:35

The 43rd Wedding-Dress Expo will be held in the Conference Center in Hong
Kong on June 2nd. The Expo, which will be 3 days long, is the largest
wedding-dress expo in summer. Many big wedding-dress retailers will come
to the expo. Now the expo is still under busy preparation..

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