History of chinese character

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Traditional Classification of Chinese Character Chinese 201 Nai-Fen Su 03/22/2011

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Transcript of History of chinese character

Page 1: History of chinese character

Traditional Classification of Chinese Character

Chinese 201Nai-Fen Su03/22/2011

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Outline

• History of Chinese Character• Traditional classification • Pictograms• Q &A

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History of Chinese Character

• Oracle bone script• Chinese bronze inscriptions• Greater Seal Script• Lesser Seal Script• Clerical Script • Regular Script- traditional and simple

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Oracle bone script

• 1500 to 1000 B.C.

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Chinese bronze inscriptions

• 1150-771 B.C.

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Greater Seal Script

• 1100 to 700 B.C.

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Lesser Seal Script

• 700 to

220 B.C.

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Clerical Script

• 221 to 207 B.C. & 206 B.C. to 220 A.D.

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Regular Script

• 220 A.D to Present (Traditional Chinese )

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Regular Script

• 1964- Simple Chinese

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Traditional classification

There are six traditional types of Han Character• Pictograms• Simple ideograms• Ideogrammatic compounds• Rebus characters• Phono-semantic compound characters• Derivative cognates

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Pictograms

• Roughly 600 Chinese characters are pictograms—stylized drawings of the objects they represent.

• These are generally among the oldest characters

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Simple ideograms

• Ideograms express an abstract idea through an iconic form, including iconic modification of pictographic characters.

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Ideogrammatic compounds

• In ideogrammic compounds, also called associative compounds or logical aggregates.

• Two or more pictographic or ideographic characters are combined to suggest a third meaning

木 ×2 = 林 木 ×3 = 森 人 +木  = 休two trees→ grove

three trees→ forest

a man leaning against a tree

→ rest

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Rebus characters

• These are characters that are "borrowed" to write another homophonous or near-homophonous morpheme, comparable with using "4" as a rebus for English "for"

自 Self

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Phono-semantic compound characters

• They form the majority of Chinese characters —over 90%

• Characters were created by combining a rebus with a determinative

Determinative Rebus Compound

氵water

木mù

沐mù "to wash oneself

艹plant

采cǎi

"harvest, vegetable"菜

cài "vegetable

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Derivative cognates

• It may refer to characters which have similar meanings and often the same etymological root, but which have diverged in pronunciation and meaning

父 爸 Dad

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Pictograms Practice

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Thank You

Q & A