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2.8: Introduction/Coda

  • Page ID
    94265
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    “The writer was required at school to read his lessons aloud sixty times; that was for reading books in his own language.”

    Chao Yuen Ren, talking about himself, in Mandarin Primer, Harvard University Press, 1961, fn. 1, p. 118.

    Contents

    1 The syllable Exercise 1

    2 Tones Exercise 2

    3 Initial consonants Exercise 3

    4 Rhymes Exercises 4, 5, 6

    5 Miscellany

    6 Writing connected text in pinyin

    7 Recapitulation Exercise 7

    To learn to converse in Chinese, it helps to develop two abilities: the ability to recognize and produce the sounds of the language adequately so you can hear and repeat Chinese material; and the ability to match the sounds of Chinese to phonetic notation so you can read, take notes or otherwise keep track of language material before you have internalized the formal character based writing system. However, it is monotonous – and probably inefficient – to try to learn the sounds and transcription before you learn how to say anything. So this introductory lesson serves a short-term and a long-term purpose. In the short-term, it provides the information you need to proceed to the first speech samples in Unit 1. And in the long-term, it provides detailed information about the sounds and their notation, which you will be able to refer to regularly as you progress through the book.

    Coda

    Chinese who studied English in China in the sloganeering days prior to the 80s can often remember their first English sentence, because in those days textbook material was polemical and didactic and lesson content was carefully chosen for content and gravity. So let your first sentence also carry some weight, and be appropriate for the endeavors you are about to begin. Here it is, then:

    種瓜得瓜,種豆得豆。

    Zhòng guā dé guā, zhòng dòu dé dòu.

    plant melon get melon, plant bean get bean ‘[You] reap what you sow.’

    (Cf. xīguā ‘water melon’; dòuzi ‘beans; peas’.)

    Zàijiàn. ‘Goodbye. (again-see) ’

    Míngtiān jiàn. ‘See you tomorrow! (tomorrow see)’


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