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         Chinese Language:     more books (100)
  1. Integrated Chinese: Traditional Character Edition, Level 1 (C&T Asian Languages Series)
  2. The Discovery of Genesis: How the Truths of Genesis Were Found Hidden in the Chinese Language by C.H. Kang, Ethel R. Nelson, 1979-08
  3. Chinese Made Easy Textbook 4 (With 2 CDs) (Simplified Characters) by Yamin Ma, Xinying Li, 2004-05-11
  4. Beginner's Chinese Dictionary (Tuttle Language Library) by Li Dong, Dong Li, 2004-11
  5. English for Chinese (Mandarin) Speakers: Learn to Speak and Understand English as a Second Language with Pimsleur Language Programs (Esl Mandarin Chinese I) by Pimsleur, 2001-12-01
  6. Chinese For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature)) by Wendy Abraham, 2005-10-14
  7. New Chinese 300 Textbook: A Beginning Language Course (C&T Asian Languages Series) (C&T Asian Languages Series) by Faculty of Peking Language Inst, 1984-04-01
  8. Picture Chinese: Art as Language by Sukming Lo, 2006-11-01
  9. Language of the Dragon: A Classical Chinese Reader, Vol. 1 (C&T Asian Language Series) (C&T Asian Language Series) by Gregory Chiang, 1999-06-01
  10. Chinese Step-By-Step: Step One (Chinese as a Second Language) by Gwen T. Wang, 1985-09
  11. Chinese Through Poetry by Archie Barnes, 2007-07-07
  12. Colloquial Chinese: A Complete Language Course (Book & Cassettes) by Kan Qian, 1995-11-09
  13. Chinese Made Super Easy by Joscelyn Quek, 2004-03-28
  14. Learn In Your Car Chinese: Mandarin (Foreign Language)(Level 1) by Henry N. Raymond, 2005-05-30

21. Mayor's Move To Cut Chinese Food Stirs A Tempest In A Wok
a good relationship with New York's Chinese community and had recently been endorsed by Sing Tao, a local Chineselanguage daily newspaper
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

22. AsianA Communications - Chinese Translation, Chinese Translator, Chinese Interpr
Chinese translation, interpreting, typesetting, voice over and software localization.
http://www.xinda.com
Services Translation Typesetting Interpreting Localization ... Contact Us Resources Resumes Samples Client List Testimonials ... CompuWare Chinese Forum Chinese FAQs Versions of Chinese CJK Comparison Chinese Fonts ... Chinese Computing Who We Are A group of Chinese and other Asian language translators in technical and business fields. We are educated both in the US and in our native countries with Ph.D., M.S. or MBA degrees from Asian and American universities. Our translators are people who love language and are gifted with the capability to write fluently in professional English as well as in Chinese, Japanese, Korean and other Asian languages. For example, one of our translations of an article from Time magazine was published in Chinese Translators Journal (No. 4, pp. 61-64, 1996) as a sample of translation excellence. We felt particularly honored since the journal publishes only one Chinese sample translation and one English sample translation in each bimonthly issue. In 1996, we also published a Chinese translation of one of our own research papers in a prestigious scientific journal in China, Kexue Tongbao (Chinese Science Bulletin, V. 41, pp. 1778-1782, 1996), the equivalent of

23. Studying Chinese Language, Learning China's Culture From Chinese-forums.com - Po
An online community of people with an interest in studying chinese language and Culture.
http://www.chinese-forums.com/index.php
Contact us for sponsorship and advertising opportunities
Chinese-forums.com User Name Remember Me? Password Home Forums Links Chat ... Partners vbmenu_register("newlink");
Your Ad Here

Free Online Chinese Lessons
By demoore
17th September 2005 03:54 PM
Resources and materials

Replies, 12 Views Mei Wah By liuzhou
9th September 2005 12:46 AM
Resources and materials

Replies, 22 Views PinyinLyrics.com By roddy
5th September 2005 12:10 AM Useful Websites Replies, 44 Views Currently, your donations are being spent on: air-conditioning Chat Users In Chat The Chat Room is empty Welcome to Chinese-forums.com Chinese-forums.com is an online community of people with an interest in Chinese language and culture. You will need to register to post, subscribe to topics and hide adverts and this message. If you are looking for something specific, please try the search function. Theme Park and some other words in Chinese - by Chunn On Sep 20, 2005 - 9:14 AM Dear all, Recently, I have questions about what is the exact Chinese words of the following English. 1. Theme park or fun park

24. Chinese Cultural Studies:  The Chinese Language And Alphabet
The Sinitic part of the name refers to the various chinese languages After Chinese, Burmese and Tibetan are the two main languages of this family.
http://acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/~phalsall/texts/chinlng2.html
Main Other Chinese Web Sites Chinese Cultural Studies:
The Chinese Language and Writing Articles from: David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language , (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987)
The Sino Tibetan Family of Languages
[pp. 310-311] The membership and classification of the Sino-Tibetan family of languages is highly controversial. The 'Sinitic' part of the name refers to the various Chinese languages (often referred to as 'dialects'); the 'Tibetan' part refers to several languages found mainly in Tibet, Burma, and nearby territories. But as there are notable similarities with many other languages of the region, some scholars 'adopt a much broader view of the family, so as to include the Tai and Miao-Yao groups. The Sinitic languages are spoken by over 1,000 million people. The vast majority of these are in China (over 980 million) and Taiwan (19 million), but bstantial numbers are to be found throughout the whole of South-east Asia, especially in Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Singapore.Imporiant Chinese- speaking communities are also found in many other parts of the world, especially in the USA. There are nearly 300 languages in the Tibeto- Burman family, and these have been classified in several different ways. It is possible to identify 'clusters' of languages which have certain features in common, such as the 50 or so Lolo languages, spoken by around 3 million people in parts of Burma, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and China. The 80 or so Naga, Kuki and Chin languages spoken in Burma and India, comprise another group. But groupings of this kind display many differences as well as similarities and it has not yet proved possible to find a neat way of classifying these, and the other groups thought to belong to the same family, into two or three types. It is by no means clear, for example, whether the small group of Karen languages, spoken by around 2 million people in Burma, should be included or excluded from the Sino-Tibetan family.

25. Chinese Cultural Studies: The Chinese Language And Pronunciation
There are two elements to the chinese language the written language, based on individual A general introduction to The chinese language and Writing and
http://acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/~phalsall/texts/chinlng1.html
Main Other Chinese Web Sites Chinese Cultural Studies:
The Chinese Language and Pronunciation [Adapted from Compton's Living Encyclopedia , AOL 8/16/1995] There are two elements to the Chinese language: the written language, based on individual symbols called characters, each of which represents an idea or thing; and the spoken language, which includes a number of different dialects. The written language originally had no alphabet, but it was easily understood by literate people no matter what dialect they spoke. Since the early 1950s a system using the Latin alphabet, called Pinyin , has been developed in China, and it is now in common use. Most of the spellings of Chinese sounds and names in this course are based on the Pinyin system of romanization. Those that are are generally familiar in their conventional [Wade-Giles] form, such as the name Chiang Kai-shek or Mao Tse Tung have been retained. Some of the numerous dialects of spoken Chinese are totally different from each other. All of them use tones to distinguish different words. Mandarin, which is spoken in the Beijing region and in northern China generally, has four common tones. Cantonese, spoken in southeastern China, has nine tones and is quite different from Mandarin. Cantonese is probably most common among Chinese-American immigrants. Today Putonghua , which is based on Beijing-area Mandarin, is the official language of government and education, and everyone is expected to learn to speak it. The central government is also expanding the use of the Pinyin romanization system and is urging citizens to learn this alphabetized system of writing Chinese words. (Pinyin represents the spoken sounds of Putonghua, which is an oral representation of Chinese characters.) Citizens are also urged to learn a simplified system of Chinese. In the People's Republic the simplified system is used everywhere. In Taiwan and Hong Kong it is still very common to see much older, and more complex, signs being used.

26. Learn Chinese Characters
chinese language and culture site with literature from Lao Zi to the present day. Individual Chinese characters linked to English translation.
http://zhongwen.com/
Learn Chinese Characters
Online Chinese-English dictionary. Learn Chinese characters by understanding their origins and interconnections.
Chinese characters, Chinese dictionary, learn Chinese, learn Chinese characters, study Chinese, Chinese chat, Chinese literature, putonghua, Chinese writing, language, etymology, hanzi, zhongwen, hanyu, guoyu, learn, study, kanji, shuowen, pictographs, glyphs, sinographs, zipu

27. Chinese Language Page
a website dedicted to the chinese language, Chinese history, Chinese Characters, foreign language aids, Chinese cooking, recipes, regions of China, OnLine,
http://www.uni.edu/becker/chinese2.html
:: Here you will find lots of sites that can be helpful for you for learning more about China and the Chinese language and culture. Most sites link to others. If you find pages that are useful, please send them to me at the e-mail address at the bottom of the page
University of Northern Iowa Take me to the other page with graphics
N.B. - This Chinese site is kept up to date and is more complete... Welcome to Super Chinese Websites
Chinese Grammar Aids
Chinese History Taiwan Chinese culture links ... Misc. Links

28. Chinese Language Page
Chinese history, Chinese Culture History, Chinese Characters, History of China, foreign language aids, News from China, News from Taiwan, Qing Qing Zhao,
http://www.uni.edu/becker/chinese.html
By:
Professor Emeritus
University of Northern Iowa
SUPER LINKS TO CHINESE WEBSITES
If you would like this page without graphics...
Press here> Chinese page without graphics = It's faster!
By: Jim Becker

Professor Emeritus
University of Northern Iowa
Background: In China there are many different dialects. Dialects usually refer to "regional forms of a language." However, many of the regional variants which are commonly referred to as "dialects" of the Chinese language are more different from one another than French is from Spanish or Norwegian is from Swedish! Below are some figures for different "dialect groups" in China: Dialect Group Number of Speakers
(approx.)
Northern(Includes Mandarin) Jiangsu-Zhejiang Hunan Jiangsi Hakka Northern Min Southern Min Cantonese One thing that makes the Chinese dialect situation unique that is different from the situation confronting speakers of French and Spanish or Norwegian and Swedish concerns the fact that all speakers who are literate share a common written language. Thus, while oral forms vary greatly, written symbols can be used to communicate effectively between speakers of different dialects. Chinese Yahoo Qing Qing Zhao's Homepage Land of Links for Chinese Condensed China Very Rich Chinese Site from E. L. Easton

29. Dr. Mathias Roth
Multimedia Chinese software trainer includes flashcards, games and a useful brainwash wizard plus an option to add a personal vocabulary. Win 95/98/NT
http://www.thinkred.com/
If you are looking for the "DrDo Chinese Language Trainer", it can now be found at www.DrDo.info in English and German (Deutsch) This page is work in progress. Currently it is mainly used for email. Related Links: Dr. Wen-Yen Do-Roth

30. Inter-University Program For Chinese Language Study At Tsinghua (IUP)
The InterUniversity Program for chinese language Studies (IUP) at Tsinghua University in Beijing, is the premier US-sponsored chinese language program
http://ieas.berkeley.edu/iup/
The Inter-University Program for Chinese Language Studies (IUP), formerly known as the 'Stanford Center,' is now in its 8th year in Beijing on the campus of Tsinghua University. IUP was originally established in Taipei, Taiwan in 1963 and in 1997 relocated to its current site in Beijing. IUP is the premier U.S.-sponsored Chinese language program intended for students who aspire to truly advanced competence, whether they be undergraduates, graduates, professionals, or established scholars. IUP currently offers a 32-week Academic Year Program , a 16-week Semester Option , and an 8-week Summer Intensive Program . All programs are located on the Tsinghua University campus in Beijing. IUP continues to be the most intensive and cost effective Chinese language program available to intermediate and advanced students worldwide. Compared with other well-known language programs in Beijing, IUP remains the most economical program when considering its low teacher-student ratio and highly effective methodology. No other program guarantees a 1:3 teacher-student ratio for group classes and a one hour daily private tutorial for less than IUP's current program fees.

31. E. L. Easton - Languages - Chinese
Materials for Teaching and Learning Languages. Learning Chinese Online UC Davis chinese language Information Page Carlos McEvilly Marjorie Chan
http://eleaston.com/chinese.html
@import url(ele.css); /*IE and NN6x styles*/
Languages online
Chinese
Grammar
Quizzes
...
Linguistic Regions
map
Dialect Groups

Chinese
InfoPlease
Chinese
Wikipedia
Chinese
German / CRI
Chinese
Columbia Univ.
Chinese
UCLA
Chinese
chinese-tools Fonts On the Computer Shunguo Liu
JOIN OTHERS
Mail List Kenyon College Mail Lists Mike Wright Mail Lists English Teachers in China / TEFL-China Teahouse Mail Lists YLC
GRAMMAR
Grammar Richard VanNess Simmons Grammar Shun Ha Sylvia Konecna Wong
Exercises
Internet TESL Library Exercises ezlearnchinese.com Exercises Transparent Language Exercises French / lechinois.com Exercises Univ. of Virginia Exercises Tim Xie Exercises Fun Trivia Exercises Daqing Chu Exercises dragonnet.hkis.edu.hk Quiz Quiz John Wong Quiz culture / gu.uwa.edu.au

32. Gloucestershire Chinese Womens Guild
Voluntary organisation helping the Chinese community. Includes description of services, photos and video clips of events, with some chinese language information.
http://www.softdata.co.uk/gloucester/china/guild.html
Gloucestershire Chinese Women s Guild
Video Clips Search Gloucestershire Secure Shopping Forums ... Chinese Womens Guild
Gloucestershire Chinese Womens Guild
Services and office Hours
Home Visit Service
  • To visit all the women and their families to identify their needs, especially the elderly and frail individuals. To visit the Chinese people in residential and nursing homes.
Advocacy Service
  • To speak on behalf of the Chinese women and their families. To provide transportation for the elderly and the frail to and from doctors surgeries, clinics, opticians, dentisits, health centres and hospitals, and for their daily needs if necessary.
Interpretation Service
To provide and act as a bridge for all the women, and their families to authorities and local services, especially for those who have difficulty in the English language.
Advice on Benefits
  • To give advice on and provide information for the potential benefits To arrange apointments for the families in need of benefits with local authorities, especially for the elderly and frail.
Languages
Cantonese, Hakka, Mandarin and English

33. Chinese: Foreign Language News And Newspapers: Publication Types: MIT Libraries
chinese language News and Magazines. Most of these sites require Chinese software obtainable from the following sites WWW in Chinese / Chinese in WWW
http://libraries.mit.edu/guides/types/flnews/chinese.html
Index Chinese French German Italian Japanese ... Spanish
Sarah Wenzel
Foreign Languages Librarian
swenzel@mit.edu

MIT

Publication Types

Foreign Language News and Newspapers Chinese Language News and Magazines
Most of these sites require Chinese software obtainable from the following sites:
WWW in Chinese / Chinese in WWW
Chinese Fonts
China News Digest
A monthly newsmagazine.
China News Services
News from Beijing and Hong Kong. To access you must register.
China Times
From Taiwan.
Chinese Classics
Access to a collection of Chinese classic literature.
CHISA
Access to articles from the weekly Chinese Scholars Abroad magazine.
Feng Hua Yuan
"A comprehensive electronic Chinese magazine." (Can be read without special Chinese software)
Global Chinese Electronic Daily News
On-line news from China and Taiwan.

34. Online Programs In Chinese Language
Accredited courses in chinese language including online degrees in chinese language.
http://www.eblcu.net/

35. CLTA.osu.edu _ Chinese Language Teachers Association
chinese language Teachers Association, chinese language Teachers Association, CLTA, chinese language Teachers Association Home Page.
http://clta.osu.edu/
C HINESE L ANGUAGE T EACHERS A SSOCIATION
Jobs

Links

Summer Prog.

Journal
... Top CLTA site the Web Help Advanced Site Search Google Chinese Web Search ~ The CLTA Home Page was launched on 20 January 1998 by the Chinese Language Teachers Association (Chinese name: 中文教師學會 / 中文教师学会). The CLTA site receives generous web server support from its host, the College of Humanities of The Ohio State University . The encoding at this website is Unicode (UTF-8). In viewing this web page, for instance, is the Chinese name of CLTA in the first sentence - given in traditional and simplified Chinese characters - correctly displayed by your web browser? If not, to view this and other pages on the Web that specify "UTF-8" as the character set for displaying non-Western scripts, be sure to adjust your browser's setting so that a multilingual font (e.g., Arial Unicode MS font) has been selected for the encoding/character set, Unicode (UTF-8). Or, at least for viewing Chinese, select a font that supports the Unicode standard and can handle traditional and simplified Chinese characters (e.g., Simsun or Simsun 18030). Mac users who do not have a multilingual (or Chinese) Unicode font can use font-conversion software to convert to Mac an appropriate Windows TrueType font (e.g., Arial Unicode MS, Simsun, Simsun 18030, etc.). For questions or suggestions on the CLTA site or corrections on information at this site please send e-mail to CLTA Webmaster

36. CLTA Journal
chinese language Teachers Association, CLTA, chinese language Teachers Association. Articles cover the areas of chinese language pedagogy, Chinese
http://clta.osu.edu/jclta.htm
J OURNAL
The Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association (JCLTA) publishes articles and reviews. Articles cover the areas of Chinese language pedagogy, Chinese linguistics and Chinese literature. The Journal has proved to be an increasingly valuable medium for exchange of information and for scholarly discussions of the teaching and learning of Chinese language and literature. Three issues are published each year, with the publication schedule of February, May and October. A new feature added to the Journal, beginning with the May 2004 issue (Volume 39, Number 2), is "Letters to the Editor." Open letters submitted to the Editor, expressing the writers' thoughts and perspectives, will be selected by the Editor for publication in the Journal, together with the Editor's replies. Our new searchable and browsable JCLTA Index Online is now available (as of 31 August 2004), covering 1966 to the present. Do try it out! Beginning with Numbers 2 and 3 of Volume 38 (2003), abstracts for the articles are also linked to the index entries. Volume 38.2 (May 2003) contains English abstracts for each article, while Volume 38.3 (October 2003) onwards (under the current editor) will include bilingual abstracts in Chinese and in English. Since 2001, services related to

37. College Of Humanities Department Of East Asian Languages And Literatures Chinese
Thank you for visiting the Web site of the chinese language Teachers Association, Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at The Ohio State
http://clta.deall.ohio-state.edu/
Students - Faculty - Alumni - News - ... Directory
Thank you
... for visiting the Web site of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at The Ohio State University. We want your visit with us to be as informative and enjoyable as possible. To achieve this goal we have recently updated our servers and have moved our site. We are now located at: http://clta.osu.edu/ This page will soon redirect you to the new site. If you do not wish to wait for it to do so, please select the U R L above and the link will immediately take you to the new Home page. We are sorry for any inconvenience. Hopefully the efficiency and usefulness of the new location will make up for this temporary nuisance. College of Humanities , 186 University Hall, 230 North Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210 P:614-292-1882, F:614-292-8666 croley.1@osu.edu.

38. Chinese Language Study Network By NJStar
ChineseLanguage.net chinese language Study Network by NJStar Software Corp - chinese language Information. Learn Chinese Chinese Learning,
http://www.chineselanguage.net/
ChineseLanguage.net
- Chinese Language Study Network by NJStar Software Corp
ÖÐÎÄ.net - ººÓï.net
Chinese Language Information - a comprehensive collection
ChineseLanguage.net
- Chinese Language Study Network by NJStar Software Corp
ÖÐÎÄ.net - ººÓï.net
Chinese Language Information - a comprehensive collection

39. Learn Chinese 5.32, Mandarin Chinese Language Learning Software.
The Best Mandarin chinese language Learning Software. It can help you study write Chinese Characterss, speak and read the real Chinese.
http://www.language-chinese.net/
Mirror: Learning-Chinese.net Home News Products ... Contact Us Learn Chinese 5.32 Learn Chinese Text to Speech 2.2

40. Harvard Chinese Language Program
Welcome to the chinese language Program. Department of East Asian Languages Civilizations. 5 Bryant Street Cambridge MA 02138 Tel 617495-2961;
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~clp/
Welcome to the Chinese Language Program
5 Bryant Street
Cambridge MA 02138
Tel: 617-495-2961; Fax 617-495-2247
Director, Dr. Shengli Feng You Are Visitor Number
How to Read Chinese On line
How to View this Page
Note on the Pinyin Fonts Harvard Symposium on Advanced Chinese Teaching (2004) ... Chinese Pronunciation Guide (BETA) Archive of Chinese Teaching Materials Study Chinese Abroad Links to Other Chinese Programs Net Information about China ... Net Search
(C)
Maintained and Authored by Dr. Wenze Hu

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