Sunday, February 9, 2020

Easy Chinese Signs To Learn Instantly


Red Chinese lantern and suspended greeting for Chinese New Year. Photo by Angela Lansury.

I stook looking at the sign hung over every doorway all around a large estate in Singapore. i thought I recognized the first sign of the two. The sign said big.

Big is pretty easy to remember and recognize. It looks like a person with their legs apart and arms outstretched.

I've been wondering for days, all through Chinese New Year, about how to recognize the Chinese words for happy new year. the signs will come up year after year. I also want to be sure that any signs I re-use say happy new year or the equivalent and not year of the - and last year's animal. that would be like saying happy 2019 for years afterwards.

I finally struck lucky, in Singapore, standing near a lantern which suspended a New Year greeting, standing near a neighbour who was not in a hurry.

I asked her, "Can you read Chinese?"


Chinese Flag

Mandarin is taught in schools in Singapore where the Chinese attend.

Singapore flag.

"Yes."

"Can you tell me what that sign under the lantern means?"


I recognized big, on the left, like a man with arms outstretched.

The sign on the right is a compound word, made up of two signs which are squashed thin to keep their height but reduce their width so they both fit inside an imaginary square for a word or idea.

The sign in the middle, left of the right hand sign, means day. The sign far right means king. I recognized that from the name of the MRT train station King Albert Park. Three horizontals with a line down the middle vertically is king. Big Day-king means (wishing you) much prosperity.

Wikipedia gives these common signs.
8 phono-semantic compounds with phonetic part 也 (yě)[35]
CharacterSemantic partPhonetic partpinyinmeaning
(originally a pictograph of a vagina)[36](none)grammatical particle; also
水(氵)waterchípool
驰 / 馳马 / 馬 horsechígallop
弓 bow (bend)chírelaxation
㫃 flagshīapplication
土 earthdì (de)ground
人 (亻)personhe
女 femaleshe
拖 / 扡 (archaic form)手 (扌)handtuōdrag

Comparisons of a sample of traditional Chinese characters, simplified Chinese characters, and simplified Japanese characters in their modern standardized forms
ChineseJapaneseMeaning
TraditionalSimplified
Simplified in mainland China only, not Japan
(Some radicals were simplified)
electricity
buy
car, vehicle
red
nothing
east
horse
wind
love
time
bird
island
language, word
head
fish
garden
long, grow
paper
book, document
watch, see
Simplified in Japan, not Mainland China
(In some cases this represents the adoption
of different variants as standard)
false, day off, borrow
Buddha
moral, virtue
kowtow, pray to, worship
black
ice
rabbit
jealousy
every
soil
step
nest
grace
strawberry
Simplified differently in Mainland China and Japancircle
listen
real
certificate, proof
dragon
sell
turtle, tortoise
art, arts
fight, war
rope, criterion
picture, painting
iron, metal
picture, diagram
group, regiment
turn
广wide, broad
bad, evil, hate
abundant
brain
miscellaneous
pressure, compression

chicken
overall
price
fun, music
return, revert
air
hall, office
emit, send
labor
sword
age, years
authority, right
burn
praise
two, both
translate
look, watch
camp, battalion
processing
齿teeth
驿station
cherry
production
medicine
read
face
Simplified (almost) identically in Mainland China and Japanpicture
sound, voice
learn
body
dot, point
wheat
insect
old, bygone, past
be able to, meeting
ten-thousand
thief, steal
treasure
country

Chineasy, picture from Wikipedia. You can identify the moon, second from left in the top row.

The sun is in the middle in the bottom row.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chineasy

Useful Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chineasy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_characters

Duolingo.com


About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please share links to your favourite websites.


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