It is currently Mon May 12, 2025 11:04 am

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 43 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3  Next
Author Message
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #21 Posted: Wed Sep 04, 2013 9:37 pm 
Lives in gote

Posts: 460
Liked others: 149
Was liked: 101
Rank: 3 kyu
Universal go server handle: billywoods
walleye wrote:
Sadly, it is unlikely you will make the progress you're dreaming about on your own.

I teach myself Japanese with decent success (though of course Chinese has its own unique problems, and I probably have to put in twice as much time as I would if I attended classes or lived in Japan).

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #22 Posted: Wed Sep 04, 2013 11:50 pm 
Gosei
User avatar

Posts: 1810
Liked others: 490
Was liked: 365
Rank: KGS 1-dan
jts wrote:
Seriously, if you're white and in China and are practically tone-deaf practically the only thing anyone wants to do is teach you tongue twisters. And I've never seen anyone write down the hanzi to explain them.

Given that Heisig's book (if I'm thinking of the right one) is a word-for-word reproduction of "Remembering the Kanji", the claim that it is uniquely suited to the needs of Chinese learners shows noteworthy chutzpah. I will also remind you that the characters are based on the language, rather than vice versa. Can you imagine if you needed to pass someone a written record to explain yourself in day-to-day conversation?

(And no, I could never get the forty-four stone lions correct. I had notable successes with another one, though - I can't remember if it was about a bottle hitting a pan or a pan hitting a bottle.)


Maybe we have a misunderstanding here.
I'm not talking about going to China and throw yourself into conversations. I'm talking about what I believe is a good way to start Chinese in your own home, miles and miles away from China.
Here, there are no chinese-speaking people. Thus speaking Chinese is useless for me, it does not add anything to my understanding - for the moment. But I got chinese books and the internet with a lot of written chinese material and since chinese uses pictograms it is completely irrelevant how they sound - for the time being.
The irrelevance shows even more when you consider that Japan has the same tradtional characters as China but just put different sounds to it - so much for "characters are based on the language".

Maybe we can agree to disagree and I'm far away from saying I'm right in any way. I just believe the reading first approach is sensible.

_________________
My "guide" to become stronger in Go

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #23 Posted: Thu Sep 05, 2013 12:34 am 
Oza
User avatar

Posts: 2508
Liked others: 1304
Was liked: 1128
walleye wrote:
Sadly, it is unlikely you will make the progress you're dreaming about on your own.

Unlikely, perhaps, but certainly not impossible. It really depends on how you learn best. I see it as a matter of motivation and discipline. Like Billywoods, I've had a fair amount of success learning a language on my own. There is quite a lot of material available for self-learners, and I've found it to be an enjoyable and valuable part of the learning process to actively decide what I want to focus on and when. Not having a teacher has made me more inclined to get in contact with native speakers to help me with things I'm not sure about.

billywoods wrote:
3. How many years, of how much hard work?
How good do you want to get, and how many hours do you put in per week? If you want my honest opinion: if 2 hours or less, give up immediately*. If 5-10 hours, you'll see measurable progress, and it'll be a year or two before you can have a half-decent conversation about something not too complicated. If 20 hours, maybe you'll be near-fluent within 5 years. Really, progress is measured in hours studied, not weeks/months/years passed since you began. It also depends on who you are, how experienced you are, and whether you speak to lots of Japanese people or not + live in Japan or don't.

*People seem to dislike it when I say this, but I've genuinely never met anyone who's learnt a language to any reasonable degree of competence by attending a class once a week. Or, to put it another way, how many very good guitarists practised for two hours a week for a few years? I'm willing to meet counterexamples, though.

Although I'd lower all the numbers a bit, I basically agree entirely.

SoDesuNe wrote:
Here, there are no chinese-speaking people.

You really don't need very many people to practice speaking. Actually, one is enough. I can't imagine you live somewhere without a nearby Chinese restaurant. :) I do understand your reasoning for preferring learning to read over learning to speak, but I see it as a personal choice and not necessarily the best way for everybody.

_________________
Patience, grasshopper.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #24 Posted: Thu Sep 05, 2013 5:58 am 
Gosei
User avatar

Posts: 1810
Liked others: 490
Was liked: 365
Rank: KGS 1-dan
daal wrote:
I do understand your reasoning for preferring learning to read over learning to speak, but I see it as a personal choice and not necessarily the best way for everybody.


No arguing here ; )

_________________
My "guide" to become stronger in Go

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #25 Posted: Thu Sep 05, 2013 10:11 am 
Lives in sente

Posts: 1223
Liked others: 738
Was liked: 239
Rank: OGS 2d
KGS: illluck
Tygem: Trickprey
OGS: illluck
SoDesuNe wrote:
jts wrote:
Seriously, if you're white and in China and are practically tone-deaf practically the only thing anyone wants to do is teach you tongue twisters. And I've never seen anyone write down the hanzi to explain them.

Given that Heisig's book (if I'm thinking of the right one) is a word-for-word reproduction of "Remembering the Kanji", the claim that it is uniquely suited to the needs of Chinese learners shows noteworthy chutzpah. I will also remind you that the characters are based on the language, rather than vice versa. Can you imagine if you needed to pass someone a written record to explain yourself in day-to-day conversation?

(And no, I could never get the forty-four stone lions correct. I had notable successes with another one, though - I can't remember if it was about a bottle hitting a pan or a pan hitting a bottle.)


Maybe we have a misunderstanding here.
I'm not talking about going to China and throw yourself into conversations. I'm talking about what I believe is a good way to start Chinese in your own home, miles and miles away from China.
Here, there are no chinese-speaking people. Thus speaking Chinese is useless for me, it does not add anything to my understanding - for the moment. But I got chinese books and the internet with a lot of written chinese material and since chinese uses pictograms it is completely irrelevant how they sound - for the time being.
The irrelevance shows even more when you consider that Japan has the same tradtional characters as China but just put different sounds to it - so much for "characters are based on the language".

Maybe we can agree to disagree and I'm far away from saying I'm right in any way. I just believe the reading first approach is sensible.



Associating sounds with characters is likely of paramount importance in learning. Refer to my previous reply in this thread for additional details :)

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #26 Posted: Sun Sep 08, 2013 4:30 am 
Lives in gote
User avatar

Posts: 329
Location: Denmark
Liked others: 4
Was liked: 65
Rank: 6D Tygem
Universal go server handle: pluspy
www.ajatt.com

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #27 Posted: Sun Sep 08, 2013 8:08 pm 
Dies in gote

Posts: 32
Liked others: 5
Was liked: 6
Rank: KGS weaker SDK
On a related subject. I started to learn Japanese now, and I would like to (try to) read some go related material online. Can anybody give an advice on some good online resources, which are updated regularly?
(didn't mean to hijack the thread, just though it is closely related)

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject:
Post #28 Posted: Sun Sep 08, 2013 8:19 pm 
Honinbo
User avatar

Posts: 8859
Location: Santa Barbara, CA
Liked others: 349
Was liked: 2076
GD Posts: 312
musai wrote:
I would like to (try to) read some go related material online.
Hi musai, how about the homepages of the

Nihon Ki-in and Kansai Ki-in ? :)

The newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun ( 読売新聞 ) has Go news:

Kisei -- Yamashita v. Iyama -- it's under National > Culture ( ホーム > 社会 > 文化 ), and not under Sports ( スポーツ ).

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #29 Posted: Sun Sep 08, 2013 8:29 pm 
Oza
User avatar

Posts: 2777
Location: Seattle, WA
Liked others: 251
Was liked: 549
KGS: oren
Tygem: oren740, orenl
IGS: oren
Wbaduk: oren
Ed mentioned the Nihon Kiin and Kansai Kiin which are good.

Nihon Kiin has weekly newspapers and monthly magazines available for purchase online now.

Newspaper articles are also good.

http://www.asahi.com/igo/
http://sankei.jp.msn.com/life/newslist/igo-igo-n1.htm

The Nihon Kiin also has links to a lot of blogs.

http://blog.goo.ne.jp/portal/official_b ... l_blog_igo

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #30 Posted: Mon Sep 09, 2013 6:32 am 
Dies in gote

Posts: 32
Liked others: 5
Was liked: 6
Rank: KGS weaker SDK
Thanks a lot, I will start deciphering them. Kanji by kanji.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #31 Posted: Mon Sep 09, 2013 7:21 pm 
Oza
User avatar

Posts: 2659
Liked others: 310
Was liked: 631
Rank: kgs 6k
Hopefully this will help with the deciphering...

http://senseis.xmp.net/?JapaneseGoTerms

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #32 Posted: Tue Sep 10, 2013 5:54 am 
Dies in gote

Posts: 32
Liked others: 5
Was liked: 6
Rank: KGS weaker SDK
jts wrote:
Hopefully this will help with the deciphering...

http://senseis.xmp.net/?JapaneseGoTerms


Oh, great! Let me just get past the "私は学生です" level in the language itself

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #33 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:37 am 
Tengen

Posts: 4382
Location: Caldas da Rainha, Portugal
Liked others: 499
Was liked: 733
Rank: AGA 3k
GD Posts: 65
OGS: Hyperpape 4k
While the OP didn't mention Korean, I'd like to ask: am I right in thinking that Korean might be slightly more managaeable to learn a bit of, since it has a phonetic alphabet? Both Japanese and Chinese seem very intimidating. For Chinese especially, I think my ambitions end with: The Eater's Guide to Chinese Characters.

_________________
Occupy Babel!

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #34 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:48 am 
Oza
User avatar

Posts: 2659
Liked others: 310
Was liked: 631
Rank: kgs 6k
hyperpape wrote:
While the OP didn't mention Korean, I'd like to ask: am I right in thinking that Korean might be slightly more managaeable to learn a bit of, since it has a phonetic alphabet? Both Japanese and Chinese seem very intimidating. For Chinese especially, I think my ambitions end with: The Eater's Guide to Chinese Characters.

Korean, Japanese, and the Chinese languages are all lumped together under "Category III, 88 weeks, 2200 class hours" by the State Department. I think to a first approximation it would be silly to learn Korean under the impression that it's much easier.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #35 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 7:02 am 
Lives in gote

Posts: 460
Liked others: 149
Was liked: 101
Rank: 3 kyu
Universal go server handle: billywoods
hyperpape wrote:
am I right in thinking that Korean might be slightly more managaeable to learn a bit of, since it has a phonetic alphabet?

Kanji and hanzi look terrifying when you first see them, but with a bit of study they become far more familiar, and even though you won't necessarily know all the common ones within a few hundred hours' study, you will at least become much more confident with learning new ones. (Also, Korean has a lot of Chinese vocabulary. It's only a guess, but I reckon a knowledge of hanja will help. It certainly does in Japanese.) More to the point, the writing systems in Chinese and Japanese are a big obstacle, but by no means the only big obstacle.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #36 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 7:20 am 
Tengen

Posts: 4382
Location: Caldas da Rainha, Portugal
Liked others: 499
Was liked: 733
Rank: AGA 3k
GD Posts: 65
OGS: Hyperpape 4k
Does this remain true if my primary interest is reading, not conversation?

_________________
Occupy Babel!

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #37 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 7:26 am 
Lives in gote

Posts: 546
Liked others: 18
Was liked: 81
KGS: FanXiping
OGS: slashpine
jts wrote:
hyperpape wrote:
While the OP didn't mention Korean, I'd like to ask: am I right in thinking that Korean might be slightly more managaeable to learn a bit of, since it has a phonetic alphabet? Both Japanese and Chinese seem very intimidating. For Chinese especially, I think my ambitions end with: The Eater's Guide to Chinese Characters.

Korean, Japanese, and the Chinese languages are all lumped together under "Category III, 88 weeks, 2200 class hours" by the State Department. I think to a first approximation it would be silly to learn Korean under the impression that it's much easier.
These languages are very different from the Indo-European languages that many of us on the forum grew up with. Not only is the vocabulary and metaphor different, but the grammar differs as well.

Japanese and Korean, at least grammatically, are similar to Manchu, Mongolian, and Turkish. If your first language is Turkish or Mongolian, you will recognize most of Japanese and Korean grammar rules, since all of these use Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) sentence structure. Chinese is very different from the previous two. Chinese relies on particles rather than changes in word morphology (word form) to indicate grammatical changes. As a result, word order within a sentence is of high importance when learning Chinese.

Korean uses mostly hangeul, which is alphabetic. However, the letters are placed in blocks to form syllables, similar to how simplified forms of Chinese characters are joined to form new Chinese characters. Apart from that, Korean tends to be very difficult for those who have not learned another East Asian language before. Anyone who's learned Japanese will be able to recognize similarities in Korean, especially in the grammar. Anyone who's learned Chinese or Cantonese will be able to recognize a lot of Korean vocabulary, at least after working out the phonetic changes that happen when a word is borrowed into another language; most Sino-Korean words tend to follow the Cantonese or Wu (old Shanghainese) pronunciations.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #38 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 7:28 am 
Lives in gote

Posts: 546
Liked others: 18
Was liked: 81
KGS: FanXiping
OGS: slashpine
hyperpape wrote:
Does this remain true if my primary interest is reading, not conversation?
I would still learn how to speak the language, for it would make it easier to recognize words when they appear on paper.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #39 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 8:24 am 
Lives in gote

Posts: 460
Liked others: 149
Was liked: 101
Rank: 3 kyu
Universal go server handle: billywoods
hyperpape wrote:
Does this remain true if my primary interest is reading, not conversation?

Huh? Hanja are written, so yes, the more time you spend reading and the broader the selection of texts you read, the more of them you'll encounter. Of course, if you happen to only want to read texts that are entirely hangul, then you can manage without hanja. But my guess from before (that knowing some hanja will make Sino-Korean vocabulary easier for you) stands.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Thinking of learning Chinese (or Japanese)
Post #40 Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 3:35 pm 
Honinbo

Posts: 9552
Liked others: 1602
Was liked: 1712
KGS: Kirby
Tygem: 커비라고해
hyperpape wrote:
Does this remain true if my primary interest is reading, not conversation?


I think that it's a mistake to think that Korean will be easier because you don't have to remember Chinese characters, and in fact, as a non-native speaker, I think that it is the opposite.

If you are a native speaker of Korean and you already know what different words mean, then sure - it's a big burden off your back if you don't have to learn thousands of Chinese characters, because you can just use Hangul and you'll be all set for reading and speaking in most situations. But as a non-native speaker, you are missing the magic of what Chinese characters provide, and that is the roots of words. Yes, there are thousands of Chinese characters to learn. But there are magnitudes more words to learn, which are comprised of combinations of these characters.

To give a practical example, let's take a look at one of the words someone already posted in this thread in Japanese, 学生. Okay, so you're studying Japanese, let's say, and you can tell that this is student. You might find it annoying to learn how each character looks, and it would seem much easier to just see the sound, "gakusei", right?

Well in the context of this single word, sure. But then you're walking down the street in Tokyo, and you see a sign that says 学校. Let's say that you didn't know any Japanese, and you had never seen this word before. If you just had the sound, "gakkou", there might be a vague connection to "gakusei", but who knows? You've got a "g" sound in there and a "k" sound in there, but how in the world do you know if these two are related?

But now let's suppose you see the value in learning the Japanese character. Now, when you see the sign that says 学校, your mind makes a connection, "Oh wait a second! I've seen 学 before! I don't know what this funny 校 symbol is, but I do remember that 学生 was student. So maybe this funky "学校" word has something to do with students... Or maybe learning..."

When you learn the Chinese character, you don't only learn that character. You learn a variety of other words that use that character, and even if you encounter something you haven't seen before, it's helpful for guessing the meaning.

tl/dr: If your primary interest is reading, as you've suggested, having Chinese characters are more helpful than not having them, especially for long-term learning. There's an investment up front in learning characters, but in the long run, you'll get a natural feeling for new words that you see - something you can only partially do with a purely phonetic alphabet.

_________________
be immersed


This post by Kirby was liked by 3 people: billywoods, hyperpape, jts
Top
 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 43 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3  Next

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group