Wu (Wúyǔ 吴语)|Wúyǔ 吴语 (Wu)
OOI Giok Ling A bustling crowd of shoppers at a Shanghai market. Wu is one of the sub languages of
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:39+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
OOI Giok Ling A bustling crowd of shoppers at a Shanghai market. Wu is one of the sub languages of
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:38+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Margaret Mian YAN The Min dialect group is the most divergent and complicated of China’s seven major languages. At least
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:38+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Language and Learning, Institution, Berkshire Encyclopedia of China|
CHANG Teh-Kuang The Library at Peking (locally known as Beida) University. The future chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, Mao
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:37+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
OOI Giok Ling A Cantonese shopper in Macao carries a baby on her back, vegetables in her bag, and an
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:37+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Margaret Mian YAN A Hakka woman in a traditional hat often worn in the fields. Guangzhou, Guangdong Province. PHOTO BY
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:36+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Yit-Seng YOW Chinese word radicals are the building blocks of most of Chinese words. Each radical conveys a certain message,
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:36+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Stefan GEORG Sino-Tibetan languages, by some measurements the largest language family in the world, are divided into two groups. The
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:35+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Chris Wen-Chao LI Modern Standard Chinese, as the official language of the Chinese-speaking world, came to be equated with the
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:35+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
Chris Wen-Chao LI Chen Duxiu, one of the founders of Communism in China, was both a scholar and a rebel.
By Ashlesha Patil|2012-01-23T16:37:34+00:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Language and Learning, Linguistics|
LU Yan These members of the New Culture Movement advocated literature written in the vernacular language of the masses. Clockwise