When you learn Chinese, it can seem the most exotic and impenetrable of languages and thatโs largely due to the Chinese alphabet. The Chinese writing system may appear to the uninitiated as both beautiful and mysterious in equal measure.
Chinese writing is notoriously difficult to master. And if youโre thinking of taking up the language, you probably have many questions.
To help, in this post, Iโll provide a broad introduction to the Chinese alphabet, explaining how it works, where it comes from and why you need to learn it.
By the end, hopefully, Iโll also convince you that learning to read and write Chinese is not as hard as its reputation suggests. And that, in fact, itโs something you should look forward to rather than dread.
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What Are Chinese Characters?
Nowadays, we see Chinese writing everywhere. We see it in sports stadiums and on football shirts, on shipping containers and on lorries, in online ads and on the news when we watch tv.
But what do all those strange symbols mean? And how do they work?
The title of this post is actually slightly misleading because Chinese has no โalphabetโ. Chinese doesnโt use letters, it uses characters.
In Chinese, each character represents one syllable. And each has a distinct meaning. Some characters may be pronounced exactly the same way. But they're written completely differently.
For example, ไธ and ๆญฅ are both pronounced bรน, but you canโt replace one with the other. The first means โnotโ while the second means โstepโ.
Ancient Chinese was a monosyllabic language, so each character represented a single word. However, with the passage of time and the evolution of the language, new concepts came to be expressed by combining single syllables to create new words.
For example, ็ซ (huล) means โfireโ and ่ฝฆ (chฤ) means โvehicleโ โ but together, ็ซ่ฝฆ means โtrainโ.
Chinese โAlphabetโ: A Little history
The history of Chinese characters is an immensely fascinating subject. But here we can only scratch the surface. However, it's still useful to understand a bit about where Chinese characters come from and how they have developed.
The Chinese writing system is among the worldโs most ancient. The precursors of modern Chinese characters have been discovered carved into bones dating back at least 3,500 years. Although the sophisticated vocabulary in use suggests that, even then, they were already very old.
The first characters were pictographs, essentially drawings of whatever they represented. Over thousands of years, many have changed beyond recognition. But in some, you can still detect a hint of the original version.
Can you guess what ไบบ (rรฉn) or ็พ (yรกng) mean? The first is the character for โpersonโ, while the second means โsheepโ. It only takes a little imagination to see why.
However, you can't express all concepts like this. And more abstract ideas are represented differently. For example, in modern Chinese, ไธ (shร ng) means โupโ while ไธ (xiร ) means โdownโ. Again, the logic is easy to see.
The next step was to come up with symbols for more complex meanings. To achieve this, individual characters were combined to create symbols for other words: the Chinese character for โwomanโ is ๅฅณ (nว) and a character meaning โchildโ is ๅญ (zฤญ). But when combined, the resulting character ๅฅฝ (hฤo) means โgoodโ.
Similarly, ๆจ (mรน) means โwoodโ while ๆ (lรญn) means โforestโ and ๆฃฎ (sฤn) means โfull of treesโ.
How Do Modern Chinese Characters Work?
Although these examples display an undeniably elegant logic, that doesnโt mean itโs possible to somehow โdecipherโ a character youโve never seen before.
One of the major differences between Chinese writing and a system based on an alphabet is that if you havenโt learnt a character, thereโs no way of reading it. If you havenโt met a character before, you canโt tell its meaning or even know how to pronounce it.
For example, if you know ๆจ, you might guess that ๆ has something to do with trees. But that doesnโt mean you know the precise meaning. And nor does it mean you know itโs pronounced lรญn.
This means you have to learn to read and write every individual character by heart. And there are lots of them. However, this isnโt quite as formidable a task as it might first appear, and now Iโll explain why.
Chinese Radicals And Phonetic Elements
Chinese characters are not made up of random lines and squiggles โ their different parts are derived from other characters, and most parts have meanings.
For example, you'll notice that ไฝ (nฤญ, โyouโ) and ไป (tฤ, โheโ) both contain ไบป. This is not a character in itself; itโs a version of ไบบ that is used in other characters. And itโs no coincidence that the characters for โyouโ and โheโ both contain the symbol for โpersonโ.
This part of the character is whatโs known as the โradicalโ. It is used to categorise the character. And if you can identify the radical, it can give you a clue about the meaning.
To take another example, the โwaterโ radical is ๆฐต. It comes from ๆฐด (shuฤญ, โwaterโ) and is found in many other characters related to water โ like ๆฒณ (hรฉ, โriverโ) and ๆน (hรบ, โlakeโ).
Many characters also contain a phonetic element that can give you a hint about the pronunciation. The character ้ (qฤซng) means โgreenโ, โblueโ or โblackโ, but it also appears inๆธ (qฤซng, โclearโ) and ๆ (qรญng, โfeelingsโ). The only difference in pronunciation between ้, ๆธ and ๆ is the tone.
Sometimes the difference between the pronunciation of the phonetic element and a character it is found in is more significant. For example, the phonetic part of ๆฒณ (hรฉ) is ๅฏ (kฤ).
However, by identifying the radical and the phonetic element, you can find clues about what it means and how to say it. While itโs not possible to work out the exact pronunciation or meaning of an unknown character, at least this can serve as an aid to your memory.
Making Chinese Words With Characters
So far, Iโve talked mainly about individual characters. But itโs important to realise that in modern Chinese, many words are polysyllabic and are made up of combinations of individual characters.
For example, take the character ๆ. Earlier, I said this character means โforestโ, but you canโt use it on its own. If you want to say โforestโ in a sentence, the word is ๆฃฎๆ (sฤnlรญn). Similarly, while the character ๅญ means โchildโ, in modern Chinese, the word you use for โchildโ is ๅญฉๅญ (hรกizi).
Traditionally, Chinese was written from top to bottom, with the first column on the right. It was sometimes also written in lines from right to left, for example, on gates โ something that can still sometimes be seen today
Modern Chinese is written in lines from left to right like English. But it's a peculiarity of Chinese writing that it is just as easily understood written in any direction.
Reform Of The Chinese โAlphabetโ In The 1950s
Thereโs one event in the history of Chinese characters that you need to know about. And thatโs the reform of 1956. In that year, the communist government of China decided to simplify around 2,000 of the most common characters to make them easier to learn and boost levels of literacy.
However, since these reforms only took place in mainland China, Chinese in Taiwan, Hong Kong and many overseas Chinese communities have continued to use the traditional versions, with the result that two sets of characters are now in use.
This means if you study Chinese in mainland China, you'll study simplified characters. But if you study in Taiwan, you'll learn the traditional versions. However, most Chinese schools around the world now use the simplified versions that you will see in mainland China. And simplified characters are now considered โstandardโ.
Here are a few examples of some differences, with the simplified version on the left:
- ๅฐๆนพ ๅฐ็ฃ tรกiwฤn (Taiwan)
- ้จ ้ mรฉn (door)
- ่ฏด ่ชช shuล (speak)
- ็ฑ ๆ ร i (love)
The last one is particularly interesting since the communist government of the 1950s decided to simplify the character for โloveโ by removing the part in the middle that means โheartโ and replacing it with โfriendโ.
How Do Children Learn To Write The Chinese Alphabet?
Now we know something about how Chinese characters work, itโs time to talk about learning them. So how do Chinese children do it? The short answer is, by starting young and spending lots of time practising!
Since there are far more characters to learn than there are letters in our alphabet, it takes much longer for Chinese children to become literate than it does for children who speak English, French or Spanish, for example.
From as early as only two or three, Chinese children use a combination of illustrated books, flashcards and similar aids to learn to recognise characters. They also spend many hours copying them out to practise.
And as someone at the start of their Chinese learning journey, this is something you can look forward to as well!
Thereโs also another tool Chinese children use to help them learn. And itโs one that will prove invaluable to you, too: pinyin.
What Is Pinyin?
Throughout this post, the pronunciation of the characters has been given next to them in Roman letters with some funny-looking accents. This is pinyin, and it will become a familiar friend as you take your first steps into the world of Chinese language learning.
In Chinese, ๆผ้ณpฤซnyฤซn simply means โphoneticโ, and itโs the official form of Romanisation in the Peopleโs Republic of China. Pinyin allows you to write Chinese words phonetically. And those โaccentsโ are not accents at all โ theyโre tone marks telling you which of the four tones to use when reading a word.
Chinese children learn pinyin to help them learn characters and correct pronunciation. And as a learner of Chinese, you will do the same before you even begin to look at characters.
While some of the letters in pinyin are pronounced very differently to English, itโs not hard to learn. And this system will act like a pair of stabilisers on a bike that will allow you to read and write in Chinese before you are ready to start using characters.
How Can You Learn Chinese Characters?
Although your first lessons will make extensive use of pinyin, as early as possible, you'll also start learning Chinese characters. So how can you do it?
As somebody learning Chinese as a foreign language, you'll employ many of the same techniques as Chinese children. And thereโs no avoiding the fact that if you want to learn to read and write Chinese, you're going to have to spend a lot of time doing it.
Start by copying out the most common characters you learn and also use flashcards to practise recognising them. You'll surprise yourself with how quickly the stock of characters you know expands.
Doodle Chinese characters when you arenโt busy. And as soon as you can, start writing simple sentences about yourself or anything else you can think of. You can always write any characters you donโt know in pinyin.
As you learn, you'll start to get a feel for the logic of the writing system. And with a little lateral thinking, you'll start to develop ways of remembering different characters.
For example, you might remember that ็ (yฤn, โcigaretteโ) includes the โfireโ radical and also looks like somebody looking at himself in the mirror (maybe smoking?).
Or you might notice that in ๅนธ็ฆ (xรฌngfรบ, โhappinessโ), the first character ๅนธ (which alone means โfortuneโ or โgood luckโ) is made up of two elements meaning โsoilโ and โsheepโ. And anyone who has both land and animals is very lucky indeed!
It doesnโt matter how ridiculous the mnemonic is โ as long as it helps. But you'll quickly learn to make up stories like this about different characters to help you remember them.
Finally, the Skritter app comes highly recommended. You have to pay for a subscription, but using it every day is an excellent way to improve your knowledge of characters and is well worth considering if you are serious about learning Chinese. Get 10% off here!
Do You Have To Learn Chinese Characters?
When I was talking about pinyin, a couple of thoughts might have occurred to you.
First, if Chinese children start by learning to write their language in Roman letters, why do they persist in using such a devilishly difficult script when a much easier alternative exists? And second, if you can read and write Chinese in pinyin, do you, as a learner, even need to bother with learning characters?
While itโs true that most Chinese can read pinyin, if you give a native speaker a pinyin text, they will find it very difficult to understand.
This is partly because Chinese contains so many homophones (words that are pronounced the same), and it can be difficult to understand which word is intended just from the pinyin.
For example, if you see bรน written in pinyin, how do you know whether it is supposed to be ไธ, ๆญฅ, ้จ, or ๅธ, all of which have exactly the same pronunciation but very different meanings?
Yes, you may be able to work it out from the context. But if the whole text is in pinyin, it might not be so easy. Believe me, once you learn to read in Chinese, itโs much easier to understand a text written in characters than one written in pinyin!
Plus, since so much communication nowadays is digital, if you donโt learn to read and write Chinese, you'll never be able to send a business email in Chinese. And you wonโt be able to chat with your Chinese friends via messaging apps.
You'll only be able to use Chinese for oral communication, and this will severely limit how useful your Chinese will be. As well as reducing your opportunities to practise and improve further, through reading stories for example.
In short, unless you only hope to learn a few basic phrases and have no aspirations of taking it further then you can get away without learning the characters. But if you're serious about learning Chinese, you need to tackle the writing system.
Chinese Alphabet: Take The First Step
So far, I have avoided the very obvious question of how many Chinese characters there are. The answer depends on who you ask. But it could be 50,000, 80,000 or even over 100,000. The good news, though, is that you donโt need to learn anything like this many.
A university-educated native speaker usually knows about 8,000, while to read a newspaper, you โonlyโ need around 2-3000. And if you know that many, you'll already have a very impressive level of Chinese.
To reach this number, patience and dedication will be your greatest allies. Yet for many people, once they start, practising Chinese characters can be an enjoyable, relaxing and even therapeutic activity.
The more you learn, the more it all falls into place and the more you appreciate the beauty and logic of a writing system that has been in use for thousands of years.
You'll never โfinishโ learning Chinese characters. And studying them is an adventure that will never end.
So it is perhaps fitting that the people who created such a system of writing are also the ones who gave us the famous saying that is so apt at the beginning of such an undertaking:
ๅ้ไน่กๅงไบ่ถณไธ
qiฤn lฤญ zhฤซ xรญng shฤญ yรบ zรบ xiร
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Over to you โ are you feeling more confident about the Chinese โalphabetโ after reading this post? Are you ready to get started with reading and writing in Chinese? Let me know in a comment below.
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