Saturday, June 14, 2008

History books of the various dynasties

lilongyue -
One of my long-term goals is to translate Chinese history books into English, as there are almost no "popular "history books (meaning for non-scholars) available about ancient China. I'm especially interested in the classical dynasties (Tang, Sung, etc.). I'm interested in modern history books, written in modern Chinese, about those eras. I'm not interested in ancient texts or classic novels based in those times.

For those of you who have read some history books in Chinese, can you recommend any? Are there any famous Chinese historians I should check out? Also, what do you think of Mainland scholars versus Taiwanese, or Hong Kong scholars? Given the Mainland approach to history, and the Communist government's censorship and control, I have the feeling that Mainland scholars might not be accurate. I'm worried that if I read Mainland history books I'll just get the version of history approved by the Communist party.

gato -
There are many such books published in the mainland. The best thing to do since you are in Hangzhou is to spend some time in the history section of a large bookstore near you. As you say, many history used as textbooks in the mainland are written from the perspective of the Party. Books written for the popular consumer market, however, are less politically dogmatic.
There are many such dynasty-oriented history books available. These on the Tang Dynasty, for example: http://search.dangdang.com/search.as...key5=&catalog=

I recently bought a copy of 重读中国历史 (Re-reading Chinese History), which seems very good. It's a look at many major events in Chinese history from a somewhat contrarian perspective (contrarian compared to the standard textbook account, that is).

In general, books published in HK and Taiwan will be more objective, but these markets are smaller and publish much fewer books compared to the mainland. So it's best to look at books published from all three places and choose the best available. For instance, I've been looking for a general history book (通史) that covers the entire span of Chinese history, and most such 通史 books published in China are either textbooks written from the Party perspective already mentioned or from the pre-1949 era written in classical Chinese (read almost only by scholars today). The few choices available from publishers in Taiwan appear to be more on the level of historical survey books that you would see in the West (e.g. History of Europe, etc.).
wushijiao -
Quote:
I'm worried that if I read Mainland history books I'll just get the version of history approved by the Communist party
I don't know if it is quite that simple. For textbooks, sure, they all propagandistic. But for more general history, I think there aren't really strict restraints, and the more specialized the history books, especially in areas that aren't sensitive, the more objective. Also, many scholars are Mainland history fans take history too seriously too be simply lured in by propaganda.

It seems to me that Hong Kong and Taiwan have a lot of great books that you can't find in the Mainland, especailly about modern history, but the Mainland just has a huge population, and thus the number of books written in the Mainland just surpasses that of those areas. Even in Hong Kong bookstores, about half or more of the history books are published in the Mainland.

I think the biases are more subtle. In my view, the two biggest biases are:

1) A pro-China/pro-Han bias. For example, in books about the Qing dynasty, the slaughter of over a million Dzungars in order to solidify the empire doesn't get much press, but the Opium Wars do. (Of course, the actions of the British and the other Western powers were morally appalling). But, China benefits still from the borders that were paid for in blood, using the same imperial logic that other empires used. However, by not mentioning the atrocities committed by China, and often describing the atrocities caused by foreigners in very emotionally-laden language, people mistakenly get the impression that the actions of the past imperial governments were peaceful and benevolent, and by extension, that China is a “peaceful country” by nature. (Of course, I’m not necessarily arguing that it won’t be in the future).

2) Many histories suffer from the "dynastic cycle complex", in which the official politics of the dynasties are over-emphasized compared to some of the broader and more important changes in the wider society.

Anyway, if you want to translate a modern historian, maybe you could try something by 易中天? He is a popular, controversial author that writes best-selling history books that have been hugely successful with the public. He has written about the Three Kingdoms period, and about the Han, among other. (But some people think his books have some flaws).
gato -
I bought a book called "宋代政治史" (A Political History of the Song Dynasty) in my usual jaunt through the local bookstore the other day. I've only skimmed through it so far, but it appears to be exactly the kind of book that's been so lacking: a broad-scoped Jonathan-Spence-level history text about a period in relatively-easy-to-read modern language. It reminds me of a great book called "Taiwan: A Political History" written by Denny Roy, a researcher at the University of Hawaii. This book is like that book but about the Song Dynasty.

Like in many other areas, some of the best history books by Chinese authors were written in the 1912-1949 period (between the fall of the Qing Dynasty and the founding of the PRC), many of them written entirely or almost entirely in classical Chinese, as most readers at the time had an extensive background in classical Chinese. But few people nowadays are comfortably reading an entire book written in classical Chinese, and these books could use some updating.
lilongyue -
Thanks for all the info. When I have a chance to make it to a book store, I plan on looking for some of the titles you mentioned.
lilongyue -
Well, several months after starting this thread, and a lots looking and asking around, I found a book about the Tang Dynasty that is close enough to my level to make it worth the effort required to read it. It's called 大唐帝国. As I was preparing to write this thread, and checking for the author's name, I noticed that a translator was listed. Translator? So I flipped to the back of the book and found out the original author is Japanese! The author's name is 陈舜臣 (Chen Shunchen). He seems to be a well known historian in Japanese, specializing in Chinese history. On the cover it say the book is 隋乱唐盛三百年, and is written in a story-like manner. I still need to read it with a dictionary, but compared to a book I bought a week ago (隋唐五代简史 , published by 福建人民版社) it's a breath of fresh air, as 隋唐五代简史 is pretty heavy, and took about 45 minutes to an hour per page, with more time spent looking up characters than actual reading.

I saw another book that also seemed appropriate, but whose focus was on the emperors of the Tang dynasty. Just forgot the name, but both books were in the small branch of a Xinhua book store near my house. For anyone else interested in finding readable history books, an important work to help steer you clear of cryptic specialist texts is 畅销. Wenlin defines it as a verb meaning "to sell well," but it also seems to be equivalent to "popular," as in "popular science," meaning written for the general public. You can also ask for "不专业的."



Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th April 2004, 12:35 PM

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Practicing Chinese with Chinese is impossible!!!

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Posted By eric

HEHE the trick to being a foreigner in China is...

HEHE

the trick to being a foreigner in China is pretending you dont speak english; pretend you are
french or maybe from some obscure country.

about speaking Chinese in the USA:

chinese people...

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Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 20th June 2007, 10:56 PM

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Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By rherschbach

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

As for the problems with the elementary-level lessons, I have a radical suggestion: just skip
them! Or use them as a supplementary resource. Start with Pimsleur, as Luobot suggests, or a good
old...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 20th June 2007, 10:30 PM

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Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By rherschbach

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

I'm not sure if memorizing dialogues is a good idea, but one thing that definitely helps is going
over the vocabulary and patterns until you have them down and can replicate them on your own
(even...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd February 2007, 02:48 AM

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Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By rherschbach

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

That's a great idea -- should be much easier to review the dialogues as many times as needed.
Probably makes for safer driving too. :)

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd February 2007, 12:45 AM

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Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By rherschbach

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Yeah, but I don't want to bug her. I was an ESL teacher once and remember it was annoying to have
to give friends/significant others/taxi drivers/random strangers free English help all the time.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 22nd February 2007, 12:29 AM

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Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By rherschbach

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

I recently finished a year's worth of study with Chinesepod. It has evolved quite a bit during
that time. For example, the intermediate lessons a year ago were comparatively simple. Then they
brought...

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 28th February 2007, 09:27 AM

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New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (下)

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Posted By uchihak

Re: New Antiwave Podcast 超级难说6 - 猪年为何不能说猪?

So why exactly can't the muslims eat pork? The podcast seems to mention some kind of disease
spread by pigs as the real reason, but did anybody catch the names of those diseases? I didn't. I
could...

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Chinese Speaking - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th January 2006, 11:12 PM

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How could I get better at tones?

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Posted By Lugubert

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all...

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all 1 of him) concentrates on reading, grammar and
character structure. His idea is that those of us who are interested enough should go to China
and...

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 11th October 2007, 09:49 PM

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Help translate and figure out a pattern

Views: 632

Posted By Han-tiger

Re: Help translate and figure out a pattern

Yeah! I think so. gato. The OP's friend has been fooled.

Forum: Reading and Writing 11th October 2007, 07:44 PM

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Help translate and figure out a pattern

Views: 632

Posted By Han-tiger

Re: Help translate and figure out a pattern

I couldn’t agree more with the article you recommended, roddy. “你大爷” is a phrase that
prevails in the daily oral communication of our Beijing natives.

Forum: Reading and Writing 11th October 2007, 07:11 PM

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Help translate and figure out a pattern

Views: 632

Posted By Han-tiger

Re: Help translate and figure out a pattern

The characters for ni da ye is "你大爷"。

Forum: Reading and Writing 11th October 2007, 04:05 PM

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Help translate and figure out a pattern

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Posted By Han-tiger

Re: Help translate and figure out a pattern

Could you please tell us where are these phrases from? I can’t figure them out! But here I tell
you, “ni da ye” is frequently used by Beijing natives to express anger or impatience. It is an
informal...

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Chinese Tutor - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 31st March 2008, 09:28 AM

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Reading my book

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Posted By Altair

Re: Reading my book

My memory is somewhat vague on this point, but I think they mean similar things from the English
point of view, but are not used interchangeably. I think you can say that someone's learning is
广阔,...

Forum: Reading and Writing 9th March 2008, 02:25 AM

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Reading my book

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Posted By Altair

Re: Reading my book

In this case, 过 is short for 过日子. No word can be used between the verb and 得, however,
and so日子 has been dropped. 在水里 kind of serves as the object of 过 instead.

汤姆在水里过得很快乐。Tom passed the time in...

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Reading my book

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Posted By Altair

Re: Reading my book

Wonderful thread! This is how I like to learn Chinese, reading something that is somewhat
interesting, but with a close look at the grammar and vocabulary to see how the language actually
works. ...

Forum: Reading and Writing 9th February 2008, 11:23 PM

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Reading my book

Views: 3,754

Posted By Altair

Re: Reading my book

I think the problem here is with English, rather than with Chinese. Maybe I can improve on your
Chinglish.

他吃得很飽: Him eating, achieved very full. In his eating, he achieved a state of being
full....

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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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The Revival of Traditional Characters is Coming?

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Re: 'Jianti' and 'fanti' are equally good

I personally think less strokes make it harder to memorize. Last semester, I memorized a 58(give
or take a few) stroked character and found it much easier to learn than other much less stroked...

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Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 16th April 2008, 02:05 PM

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What is HSK?

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Posted By heifeng

Re: What is HSK?

Motown. That kinda says it all....I don't think I know anyone from there who doesn't have some
type of machining knowlege or tangled up in related work...of course it makes sense that you
should...

Forum: Reading and Writing 15th April 2008, 05:58 PM

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What is HSK?

Views: 551

Posted By heifeng

Re: What is HSK?

here you go, this is what you must be looking for: "HSK"
(http://www.komo.com/CNC%20Routers/Machine%20Construction/Mach%20Options/hsk_technology.htm) .
hope it helps.:tong

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Learn to speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 5th May 2008, 01:07 AM

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five types of chinese articles

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Posted By Luoyingbinfen

Re: five types of chinese articles

They should only be four:随笔,说明文,议论文(等同于评论),读后感(seems could
not be listed here)

随笔 is an article which is written in a rather free style

说明文 is a type of artile which discribes certain...

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Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Reading and Writing 7th May 2008, 11:03 AM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

Re: Taiwanese names and romanisation

To me the spelling of Taiwanese names and the standardisation is affected by the fact that Hanyu
Pinyin is not favoured in Taiwan and they prefer no standard or multiple standards to a standard
made...

Forum: Reading and Writing 5th May 2008, 10:03 AM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

I agree I made another mistake, sorry. I know apostrophes are used for the aspirated consonants, I
typed to fast and put the apostrophe in the wrong place. Yes, it should be T'aichung in standard...

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 07:38 PM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

Makes sense then - Kee-lung (lung as in English "lung", not loong)

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 06:29 PM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

I knew Qingdao (city) for 青岛 (Qīngdǎo) before I learned Tsin Dao (beer), I couldn't figure
out why it's spelled that way, in standard Wade-Giles it would Ch'ing-Tao. I am used to it now.
"Q-" may not...

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 04:12 PM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

Lu, just to make clear I always meant Taiwanese version of Mandarin in this thread, not Minnanhua.
I am also aware that names like Keelung don't render the Taiwanese Mandarin but Minnanhua.
Thanks...

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 01:23 PM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

Corrected. Thanks, Skylee. I forgot the correct one. :)

Some names I referred to before:
基隆 Jīlóng Keelung or Jilong - this makes me think the renaming in English is outstanding,
馬祖 (马祖) Mǎzǔ...

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 11:31 AM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

I don't mean to be a smart peter, Skylee but I only explain why it's different from Taiwanese
romanisation. The bastardised Wade-Giles is used inconsistently - ch'- and ch- (ch- and zh- in
Hanyu...

Forum: Reading and Writing 4th May 2008, 07:48 AM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

回复: Taiwanese names and romanisation

Thanks for your replies. Skylee, Hong Kong is different, it follows Cantonese not Mandarin
pronunciation but in Taiwan Mandarin is standard. Keelung is actually pronounced as Jilong.

Forum: Reading and Writing 3rd May 2008, 09:53 PM

Replies: 25

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Views: 724

Posted By atitarev

Taiwanese names and romanisation

Hi,

Here's a link how many Taiwanese names can and are often romanised using Hanyu Pinyin:
http://www.pinyin.info/taiwan/place_names.html
Although, I don't necessarily agree with the comment that...

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Thursday, June 5, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: ZDT Flashcards Forum 3rd April 2008, 07:42 PM

Replies: 1

How to modify "edit entry" interface?

Views: 237

Posted By regisb

How to modify "edit entry" interface?

Hi,
I am considering using ZDT as my one and only note taking tool in Chinese class. In order to do
that I need to be able to input example sentences along with the word translations in every...

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Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 18th December 2007, 11:17 AM

Replies: 5

Adsotrans updated?

Views: 602

Posted By msittig

Re: Adsotrans updated?

Sweet, thanks a bunch.

Forum: Adsotrans.com Forum 17th December 2007, 10:56 AM

Replies: 5

Adsotrans updated?

Views: 602

Posted By msittig

Adsotrans updated?

Hey hey, thanks for bringing Adsotrans back online.

Were there any significant upgrades made? Or just general maintenance?

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 3rd March 2005, 03:31 AM

Replies: 20

Hardest sound to pronounce?

Views: 6,838

Posted By jwarriner

Hardest to pronounce - rui?

Zhuangzi, djwebb2004, and others are pretty close trying to get to the leading r sound as in ri
and rui when they suggest approaching it from shui and j'taime.
The sound is both retroflex (tongue...

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Speak Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd June 2004, 01:30 AM

Replies: 44

Poll: Why learning spoken Chinese as a foreigner is easy and hard

Views: 7,920

Posted By Jasper May

Also, how many native Chinese could ? I'm a...

Also, how many native Chinese could

?
I'm a native Dutch speaker, but there's no way I could do these things in Dutch.

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Learn Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.02 seconds; generated 3 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: carlo

Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th August 2006, 06:43 PM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By carlo

... I apparently wrote that, in my younger years....

... I apparently wrote that, in my younger years. Do you read French?
http://perso.orange.fr/calounet/biographies/shansa_biographie.htm
Sorry, actually 7 years before first published novel.
For...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 1st June 2005, 03:45 PM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By carlo

This young lady...

This young lady (http://www.edition-grasset.fr/auteurs/sa.htm), born and raised in Beijing, wrote
an award winning first novel in French after studying the language for a couple of years... I
think...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 30th May 2005, 11:08 AM

Replies: 38

dashan 大山, Igor(from taiwan) and any others who have disgustingly good chinese

Views: 8,318

Posted By carlo

A friend of mine was born in Beijing of two...

A friend of mine was born in Beijing of two European parents 20+ years ago, and grew up here. I
think she speaks better Chinese than Dashan (with all the respect I have for Dashan). I know a
couple...

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Chinese Online Class - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.20 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Taibei

Forum: Speaking and Listening 27th July 2005, 12:16 PM

Replies: 52

Pinyin used in Taiwan?

Views: 4,972

Posted By Taibei

Wow, this thread is all over the place. :lol:...

Wow, this thread is all over the place. :lol:

OK, first things first. Taiwan's national government has proclaimed Tongyong Pinyin to be the
country's official romanization scheme for Mandarin and...

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: ala

Forum: Speaking and Listening 24th June 2004, 10:15 AM

Replies: 55

Married to a Chinese in the U.S.?

Views: 7,036

Posted By ala

what a load of BS

what a load of BS

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd June 2004, 05:50 AM

Replies: 55

Married to a Chinese in the U.S.?

Views: 7,036

Posted By ala

it's not a problem in Shanghai nor Hangzhou.

it's not a problem in Shanghai nor Hangzhou.

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Study Chinese - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: HashiriKata

Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th August 2005, 09:50 PM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By HashiriKata

Thanks, skylee! :mrgreen: (but does the wrong...

Thanks, skylee! :mrgreen:

(but does the wrong version "我爱你死了" mean anything? would it mean something like "I want
you to die" ?)

Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th August 2005, 07:04 PM

Replies: 61

most embarrassing moment while learning Chinese

Views: 17,258

Posted By HashiriKata

I once said: 我爱你死了! (Still not quite sure what...

I once said: 我爱你死了!
(Still not quite sure what this possibly means :mrgreen: )

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: geek_frappa

Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th April 2004, 11:58 PM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By geek_frappa

yes. the migration of Chinese all over the world...

yes. the migration of Chinese all over the world has in some ways helped preserve parts of the
ancient language, so it is not a surprise that the southern Chinese who migrated away from the
mainland...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 8th April 2004, 07:28 AM

Replies: 62

Chinese roots in other languages

Views: 7,944

Posted By geek_frappa

where can i find old recordings of Chinese...

where can i find old recordings of Chinese speakers?
where can i find the OLDEST of these recordings???

:D

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Learn mandarin - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.05 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: simonlaing

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th June 2007, 06:19 AM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By simonlaing

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

To the profound Luo bot,

I think the issue of good pronunciation is important. I do think listening to standard dialect is
quite good but don't think the R hua ying (the adding of an R sound to...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 14th May 2007, 09:58 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By simonlaing

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

On an advanced level do you think playing games is still interesting? I feel comprehension
exercises and fill in the blank HSK style questions are a good way of testing mastery of Chinese.
What...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th January 2007, 03:02 PM

Replies: 63

Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

Views: 10,684

Posted By simonlaing

Re: Chinesepod.com-Does it really work?

If I started a VideoChinesepod site would you be interested in it and use it?

I have a couple of friends who like Chinesepod.com because they can put them on their MP3 player
and listen to it...

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.15 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Koneko

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd February 2007, 10:17 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By Koneko

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Ha ha.. I didn't know he was also in in here... :mrgreen:
Oh yes, Hashirikata - I am quite contended.
Very full, in fact, and a bit bulimic as well. :lol:

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd February 2007, 07:07 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By Koneko

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Pardon my ignorance but who is this Steve Kaufmann guy?!
Please could someone appease my insatiable curiosty... :wink:

K.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd February 2007, 05:49 PM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By Koneko

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Well, it's not really an "accent" thing here.
Kaufman just got some noticeable lilt, I think.

I don't know how to describe his "lilt". Hmm... Maybe it's a bit like the American English &
Irish...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 2nd February 2007, 12:18 AM

Replies: 71

Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Views: 9,086

Posted By Koneko

Re: Steve Kaufmann - How good is he?

Definitely! :mrgreen:
His lilt is so foreign to me, he tends to prolong his last words in his sentences too. :wink:

K.

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Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: ala

Forum: Speaking and Listening 4th February 2006, 07:57 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala

I like Taiwan Mandarin (Guoyu), which sounds more...

I like Taiwan Mandarin (Guoyu), which sounds more natural and conversational.
Beijing Mandarin (Putonghua) sometimes sounds really pretentious in a communist/proletariat sort
of way. Hard to...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 12:02 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala

That's still highly speculative. Cantonese...

That's still highly speculative. Cantonese people generally have very high cheek bones (at least
relative to the rest of the Chinese population), and much of Chinese pop culture comes from Hong...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 06:55 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala

the "double" eyelid fold (双眼皮) being...

the "double" eyelid fold (双眼皮) being preferred is not a product of Western civilization
influences, it was preferred a thousand years ago. There are hundreds of millions of Chinese with
the...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 23rd January 2006, 01:09 AM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala

they probably were arguing. :wink: shanghainese...

they probably were arguing. :wink:
shanghainese isn't known for being loud and argy bargy, it's a 吴侬软语 (wunong ruanyu)
dialect, part of the same family as suzhou-hua. in fact, shanghainese today is...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 17th January 2006, 11:53 PM

Replies: 77

which chinese dialect(s) do you like most?

Views: 8,451

Posted By ala

Shanghainese is much faster than Mandarin;...

Shanghainese is much faster than Mandarin; syllable distinction is very muddled in Shanghainese,
it's much more word-based compared to other Chinese dialects. Single syllables by themselves
usually...

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Friday, May 30, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Quest

Forum: Speaking and Listening 19th August 2005, 05:54 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By Quest

打开世界地图,你可以看到中华人民共和国在亚洲东部,太平洋的西岸。她�
��一个有几千年历史的文明古国,面积...

打开世界地图,你可以看到中华人民共和国在亚洲东部,太平洋的西岸。她�
��一个有几千年历史的文明古国,面积跟欧洲差不多。在这么大的一个国家�
�,到处都有美丽的山水,迷人的景色。她深深地吸引着世界各国的旅游者。
中国的山水不但很美,而且[总是跟]中国的古老文化的文化,紧紧结合在一�
�。在游览名胜古迹的时候,你可以听到很多神话传说和历史故事,还可以看
到古代文学家留下的诗和文章,欣赏他们的书法艺术。在风景最美的地方...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th August 2005, 09:42 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By Quest

I disagree. Few Mandarin speaking Chinese would...

I disagree. Few Mandarin speaking Chinese would speak incorrect tones, despite regional variations
in pronunciation.

Forum: Speaking and Listening 12th August 2005, 05:44 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By Quest

开: not flat enough 地: 4th tone, you used the 3rd...

开: not flat enough
地: 4th tone, you used the 3rd tone
山: 1st tone, you used the 2nd tone
景:3rd tone, you used the 2nd tone
各:4th tone, you used the 2nd tone
不但: 2 + 4, I heard 1+3
总是: zong3shi4, I...

Forum: Speaking and Listening 12th August 2005, 05:12 AM

Replies: 66

Audio file: please criticise my pronunciation

Views: 6,849

Posted By Quest

Great, your pronunciation is very good, I...

Great, your pronunciation is very good, I understood everything except that one part about China's
old culture. You just need to work on some of the tones.
...

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Chinese language - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.01 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: venture160

Forum: Speaking and Listening 15th February 2007, 12:11 PM

Replies: 75

New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (下)

Views: 12,291

Posted By venture160

Re: New Antiwave Podcast 人民大会谈4 - “东南西北”宋以朗 (上)

I haven't had time yet to listen to this one, but when I do I'll be sure to post my thoughts.

venture160

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Chinese Lesson

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Search took 0.07 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Lugubert

Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th January 2006, 11:12 PM

Replies: 82

How could I get better at tones?

Views: 18,328

Posted By Lugubert

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all...

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all 1 of him) concentrates on reading, grammar and
character structure. His idea is that those of us who are interested enough should go to China
and...

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Chinese Lesson

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Showing results 1 to 1 of 1
Search took 0.07 seconds; generated 4 minute(s) ago. Search: Posts Made By: Lugubert

Forum: Speaking and Listening 25th January 2006, 11:12 PM

Replies: 82

How could I get better at tones?

Views: 18,328

Posted By Lugubert

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all...

Where I study Chinese, the uni lecturer (yes, all 1 of him) concentrates on reading, grammar and
character structure. His idea is that those of us who are interested enough should go to China
and...

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Children's Arts Festival concluded

Home Business China International Culture��Edu Sci��Tech Sports Life Travel P
hotos

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  China Observer

�� Regional disparity causes wealth gap in China

�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

  Photos

�� Children's Arts Festival concluded

�� Miss Intercontinental Beauty Pageant's final

�� Jeans Fever Exhibition held in Hong Kong

��Home>>Photos

Children's Arts Festival concluded

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-31 19:19:48

The pupils from South korea perform on July 30, at the closing ceremony
of UNESCO Children's Performing Arts Festival of East Asia held in Macau.
More than 500 children representatives from mainland China, Japan, North
Korea, South Korea, Mongolia, Macau and Hong Kong spent four days in the
festival. Those art performances represented unique culture and art
traditions of various regions.

UNESCO Children's Performing Arts Festival of East Asia concluded in
Macau on July 30.

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 School - First Wal-Mart store opens in Shanghai

Home Business China International Culture��Edu Sci��Tech Sports Life Travel P
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�� Regional disparity causes wealth gap in China

�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

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�� First Wal-Mart store opens in Shanghai

�� Oriental Pearl Tower's economic benefit tops world's towers

�� Learning Chinese kung fu

��Home>>

First Wal-Mart store opens in Shanghai

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-28 17:26:38

Shoppers flock to a newly-opened Wal-Mart store in the Pudong New Area of
Shanghai July 28, 2005. It's the world's largest retailer's first
shopping mall in Shanghai. Wal-Mart plans to increase its China outlets
to 90 by the end of 2006.

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Saturday, May 24, 2008

Learn Chinese - Students retread the Long March route

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�� First generation of single offspring too fragile?

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Students retread the Long March route

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-27 15:19:49

The activity for Chinese college students to experience the Long March
was unveiled on July 20. College students will retread the Long March
route and visit hometowns of great military leaders in Sichuan, Shaanxi
and Jiangsu to experience the hardship of the Long March, commemorate the
revolutionary fathers, carry forward their unyielding spirit and promote
the culture of red revolution.

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Friday, May 23, 2008

Learn Chinese - Rare melon in Henan's Xuchang

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�� China will get used to new RMB currency regime

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�� Rare melon in Henan's Xuchang

�� Miss Bikini showed up in Nanning

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Rare melon in Henan's Xuchang

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-26 16:23:53

Six melon vines yielded nine melons on July 25, at senior resident Ma
Peichi's house yard in Yanling County of Henan's Xuchang City. The
largest melon is 1.33 meters in length. Part of the melon has been cut
away and the melon has formed a light yellow and rough crust on the
surface.

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Chinese language - Computers of strange shapes showed up in Taipei

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�� Chinese women upside down in 40 years

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�� Tibetan herdsmen migrated to new pasture

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Computers of strange shapes showed up in Taipei

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-25 16:23:20

Participating works of the third "PC Image Creation Contest" were on
display in Taipei World Trade Center on July 22, 2005. The contest was
divided into two groups including "individual group" focusing on digital
family and "campus group" aiming at digital family, digital office and
mobile life concept. Photo shows individual group's design of computer in
the shape of a Swiss knife.

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Chinese School - RMB appreciation positive for economy, trade

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�� China's wish list

�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

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�� Miss Bikini performed in Linfen

�� Shanghai hosts underware fashion show

�� Tibetan farmers celebrates Harvest Festival

��Home>>Business

RMB appreciation positive for economy, trade

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-23 19:29:39

(Source: Xinhua)

The People's Bank of China, the central bank, announced to scrap the
yuan's decade-old peg to the U.S. dollar, and in stead phase in a
flexible mechanism of the yuan exchange rates by taking into account of a
basket of major world currencies.

July 23 - China's long-awaited but unexpected decision to appreciate its
currency sent shock waves to the international financial market.
Economists hold that the new RMB rating system will have a positive
effect on the country's economy in the long run.
The RMB yuan, which had been pegged to the US dollar for over adecade at
a rate of one dollar for 8.27 yuan, began to be traded at 8.11 starting
19:00 Thursday, according to the announcement released by China's central
bank, with pegging system being switched to refer to a basket of foreign
currencies.
"The 2 percent appreciation of RMB may weaken exports and boost imports,"
Wang Zhao, a research fellow with State Council Development Research
Center Marco-economy Department, said, "in other words, the net exports
will see a decline."
However, the move helps China build a healthy and sustainable development
structure. The export-oriented policy of RMB being pegged to the US
dollar, which made made-in-China commodities less expensive, provoked a
series of trade conflicts in the latest years."
Many overseas firms moved to China to take advantage of China's cheap
labor force. The appreciation of RMB squeezes the profit margin of
labor-intensive and heavily-polluted firms, Wang said.
"For example, some tennis rackets are made of carbonic material, which is
heavy-polluted. The appreciation might force these companies to leave
China," he said.
"According to the purchasing power parity evaluation, the RMB was really
undervalued," Zhao Yumin, a research fellow on international market from
the Ministry of Commerce told Xinhua. "The appreciation pushes RMB closer
to its real value."
"The key factor to a product is technology instead of foreign exchange
rate," Zhao said, "some low-end producers will be washed out. However,
the appreciation will not have much impact on high-end companies."
Foreign manufacturers whose products target China's market, such as
Motorola, would not feel much pressure. Yet those targeting overseas
market might need a second thought, Zhao said.
Tang Min, deputy resident representative of the Asia Development Bank's
PRC Resident Mission, said the pegging system reform would have a limited
effect on foreign trade in the short term.
"The reform indicated that China's foreign exchange system is developing
towards a more flexible, mature, and market-oriented direction. Summing
up the reform experiences of other developing countries, China should
push for the reform slowly to fence off unexpected risks," Tang said.
Tang's remarks were echoed by Zhao Yumin. "The appreciation and reform
are a wise decision," she said, "first of all, the appreciation could
help rub off trade conflict pressure from China's trade partners. Second,
the modest movement of RMB will not result in big fluctuation in the
financial market. Third, the pegging reform leaves enough space for the
continuous reform on the yuan's rate."
"More importantly, referring to a basket of currencies can hedge off more
financial risks than to a single currency," Zhao said.

          ��
China's central bank adjusts RMB exchange rate (2005-07-21)

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Learn Chinese - Brave swimmer

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�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

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�� Brave swimmer

�� China's national flowers proposed

�� Cross-straits Taoism concert held in Taipei

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Brave swimmer

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-22 11:38:30

Several swimmers swim bravely in the Yangtze river after second flood
peak passing through Southeastern China's Chongqing city. Continuous rain
hit Chonging and Sichuan recently and caused a water level surge of
Yangtze river and Jailin river.

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Learn Chinese - Beijing holds contemporary art exhibition

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�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

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�� Tour of Chinese and western folk art

�� Yongning Tomb stone carving

�� World's highest railway station built

��Home>>Photos

Beijing holds contemporary art exhibition

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-21 14:12:09

An art exhibition named "The Wall: Reshaping the Contemporary Chinese
Art" held a pre-exhibition show in Beijing on July 20. The exhibition
consists of four parts: the wall of history, the wall of society, the
wall of cultural status and the wall of screen. It displays a large
number of excellent contemporary Chinese artworks.

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Sunday, May 18, 2008

Chinese School - Google to open research center in China

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�� China's wish list

�� Culture of romantic dates stimulates HK economy

�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

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�� China mainland braces for typhoon

�� Song and dance of Miao ethnic group

�� Cool down in thousand-year-old street

��Home>>Business

Google to open research center in China

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-20 10:28:55

(Agencies)

(Photo: AFP)

July 20 - US Internet search powerhouse Google is moving to tap China's
huge market by opening a research and development center in the country.
Google is creating the base to better connect with the growing number of
computer users in China's rapidly growing economy and to tap into the
talents of Chinese scientists and engineers, company officials said.
Technology industry veteran Lee Kai-Fu has been hired as president of
Google's Chinese operations and will head the new center, slated to be
running by October, according to Google.
Google officials heralded the creation of the center as a sign of strong
commitment to cultivating Chinese talent as well as its intent to form
alliances with universities and institutes.

          ��Google licensed for China office (2005-05-12)

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

Chinese Online Class - 12 Girls Band performed in Taiwan

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�� Survey of Beijing's rich residents

�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

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�� Latin Dance Open Competition

�� Rare stone auction in Jiangsu

�� Giant pandas spend hot summer

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12 Girls Band performed in Taiwan

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-18 16:07:30

12 Girls Band, a famous all-girl band of folk music from the Chinese
mainland, arrived in Taiwan for the second time. The band was busy on
July 16, rehearsing for the concert named "The Journey to the Silk Road"
in Taipei, which was held on the evening of July 16th and 17th at the
National Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

Chinese language - Special stamps on China's first museum issued

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�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

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�� Taekwondo craze in summer holiday

�� 'Stove tables' show up in a restaurant

�� First Olympic reading room opened

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Special stamps on China's first museum issued

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-16 19:58:33

The State Post Bureau has issued Nantong Museum, a set of two special
stamps with denomination of 80 fen on July 16, 2005. Nantong Museum is
the first museum in China, established by an educationist, Zhang Jian, in
1905.

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Cantonese hold consecration ceremony for a car

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�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

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�� Contestants of 2005 International Super Modeling Contest show up

�� Cantonese hold consecration ceremony for a car

�� Stewardesses of China Southern Airlines to wear new uniforms

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Cantonese hold consecration ceremony for a car

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-14 16:49:06

In front of the Guoen Temple in Guangdong's Xinxing County, two monks
were holding a consecration ceremony for a new car to pray for safety for
the car owner.

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Shuttle Discovery launch delayed

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�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

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�� Models promote Taiwan fruits

�� Miss Intercontinental Final kicks off

�� Traditional ways to enjoy the cool in Turpan

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Shuttle Discovery launch delayed

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-14 08:56:47

(Agencies)

July 13 - A faulty fuel gauge on Discovery's external tank has forced
NASA to call off Wednesday's launch of the first shuttle flight since the
Columbia disaster 2 1/2 years ago. The space agency did not immediately
set a new launch date.
The decision came with less than 2 1/2 hours left in the countdown, as
the seven astronauts were almost done boarding the spacecraft. Up until
then, rain and thunder over the launch site appeared to be the only
obstacle to an on-time liftoff.
As astronaut commentator in launch control said that it was unlikely the
problem could be solved quickly and that another launch attempt on
Thursday was all but impossible.
The problem was with one of the four engine cut-off sensors, which are
responsible for making sure the spacecraft's engines shut down at the
proper point during the ascent. NASA said it appeared that the sensor was
showing a low fuel level, even though the tank was full.
If the engines were to continue running at high speed without fuel, it
could lead to a catastrophe.
Shuttle managers considered conducting a fueling test at the launch pad
on the replacement tank, but ruled it out to save time, saying that the
actual fueling on launch day would be the ultimate test.

          ��NASA sets July 13 for shuttle launch (2005-07-01)

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Learn Chinese - Hu Jintao meets with Taiwan New Party chairman

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�� Miss Intercontinental Final kicks off

�� Traditional ways to enjoy the cool in Turpan

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Hu Jintao meets with Taiwan New Party chairman

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-12 16:13:45

(Source: Xinhuanet)

BEIJING, July 12 - Hu Jintao, general secretary of the Central Committee
of the Communist Party of China (CPC), met with visiting New Party
Chairman Yok Mu-ming from Taiwan in the Great Hall of the People here
Tuesday afternoon.

          ��New Party delegation visits Beijing (2005-07-10)
          ��New Party delegation visits Dalian (2005-07-09)
          ��New Party delegation visits Nanjing (2005-07-08)
          ��New Party chairman arrives in Guangzhou (2005-07-06)

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Monday, May 12, 2008

Learn mandarin - China marks World Population Day

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�� China has strong energy production and consumption system

�� Ten social strata formed in China

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�� Models promote Taiwan fruits

�� Miss Intercontinental Final kicks off

�� Traditional ways to enjoy the cool in Turpan

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China marks World Population Day

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-11 15:41:28

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)

(Photo: cctv.com)

July 11 - China will provide education on AIDS prevention, particularly
among women.
The educational activities aim to mark World Population Day, which is on
Monday.
Senior legislator Gu Xiulian says that the Chinese government's efforts
on AIDS control and prevention should focus more on women.
She also says governments at all levels should do more to increase
opportunities for female AIDS patients to receive treatment.
Official figures show that there are an estimated 840 thousand AIDS
victims in China. The proportion of women patients is on the rise, taking
up about a quarter of the total so far this year.

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Sunday, May 11, 2008

Learn mandarin - Beer bottle ��aircraft carrier��

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�� Can China create an inexpensive college degree?

�� Beijing youth spending parent's nestegg

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�� Beer bottle ��aircraft carrier��

�� Beijing Vogue Life Top 10 released

�� 1st Chinese Digital Publishing Expo kicked off

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Beer bottle ��aircraft carrier��

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-10 19:18:24

On July 9th, a 16-meter-long and 6-meter-wide ��aircraft carrier�� built
with 14,000 bottles of beer showed up in Shenzhen's Window of the World,
celebrating its tenth beer festival.

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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

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�� Can China create an inexpensive college degree?

�� Beijing youth spending parent's nestegg

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�� Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

�� Top models stage "Thai Fashion Show" in Beijing

�� Animals try to cool themselves

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Sand painting "Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival"

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-08 15:00:35

(July 7th) In the complex building of Shandong College of Arts, Ge
Pingchun from Ju County, Rizhao is displaying the colorful sand painting
"Riverside Scene of Qingming Festival" he created. The painting is 12
meters in length, 0.43 meter in width and six kilograms in weight. It was
created with fine sand from Rizhao beach, paper, and glue made by Ge
himself. Being enlarged with 1:2 ratio from the original size, the
painting took Ge 15 months for production. Unlike other sand paintings,
this one is color-fast and firm and can be folded and rolled easily,
making it convenient to carry.

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Friday, May 9, 2008

Learn Chinese - China trade surplus to surpass 70 bln USD

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�� Beijing youth spending parent's nestegg

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�� 6,000 photos recording Japan's war crime

�� 2006 fashionable underwear exhibited in Beijing

�� Summer Sourcing Show for Gifts, Houseware & Toys 2005

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China trade surplus to surpass 70 bln USD

www.chinanews.cn 2005-07-07 11:07:41

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)

BEIJING, July 7 - China's 2005 global trade surplus is forecast to
surpass 70 billion dollars, up from 32 billion dollars last year.
The official International Business Daily reports that the figure would
include a surplus with the United States of some 100 billion dollars, or
190 billion dollars under US government calculation methods.
The newspaper urges the government to take measures to increase imports
to narrow the trade gap. It also recommends increased government overseas
purchases, particularly capital goods and major agricultural products.
The import growth has slowed down, running at only 14 percent in the
first five months of the year and down from 40 percent last year, as the
country takes in less energy, raw materials and agricultural products.

          ��China reports trade surplus of 11.1b USD (2005-03-11)

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