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Xingjian, Li – Chinese Education, 1977
Evaluates various explanations for the fact that Chinese writing has remained at the ideographic stage for several thousand years. Reasons include dialect differences, social and political unrest, and attempts by the ruling class and men of letters to preserve complex character writing as an indication of class superiority. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Chinese, Comparative Education, Evaluation, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Cheng, Chin Chuan – Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 1975
Discusses the linguistic, political and social forces central to the development of Chinese characters. (CLK)
Descriptors: Chinese, Ideography, Language Patterns, Language Standardization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Charters, A. Helen – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1997
Examines why learners of Mandarin use overt nouns and pronouns to a greater extent than native speakers. Findings indicate that no single syntactic structure is a significant contributor to the different rates of optional ellipsis but that some learners use ellipsis only in syntactic contexts permissible in English and most use it in a narrower…
Descriptors: Adults, College Students, Context Effect, Discourse Analysis