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Language
2005/11/04
The official language of China, known in English as
Mandarin, is spoken by the largest number of people in the
world. Mandarin is referred to by the Chinese as putonghua or
"the common language," but in some regions in China, people
also speak Cantonese, Shanghainese, Sichuanese or any one of a
number of minority languages and dialects. Still, the vast
majority of these same people share the same writing system,
which is commonly called "Chinese characters." So even though a
word may be pronounced differently in Hong Kong, Shanghai or
Beijing in the native dialects of those cities, it's written in
exactly the same way.
Chinese characters evolved over thousands of years from
early pictographs to the complex and beautiful system we see
today. The art of calligraphy is revered; how someone forms
their writing is said to reveal much about them and their
character, much as any artwork does the artist. Many old and
commonly held beliefs about characters (such as allegedly being
incompatible with the computer age, or all being "little
drawings" of what they represent) are untrue and in fact
Chinese characters show no sign of going out of fashion.
Knowledge of how to say even a few words in Mandarin will
greatly increase the pleasure of any trip to China. For written
Chinese, it is commonly accepted that recognition of around
3,000 of the most frequently used characters is enough to "get
the gist" of a newspaper or similar publication.