Let's see now some adjectives we have learned in class:
Friday, 13 December 2013
Friday, 6 December 2013
Lesson 9: nationalities and languages 2.
Now again we will go on countries, nationalities and languages. It is time for Italy, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Irland and Portugal.
I have also added a sentence to ask about nationality. The verb has no changes and neither has the rest of the sentence so if you want to ask a different person, you just have to change the subject.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
Friday, 29 November 2013
Lesson 8: Family 1.
Let’s go with another vocabulary listing. This time it is the turn for the near family,
very near family.
After a
hard investigation I have reached the conclusion that knowing all the names for
chinese relatives is nearly impossible. Your brother-in-law’s brother’s cousin
will probably have an especific word which will depend for sure if he is
married to your elder sister or your younger sister or even if the cousin
belongs to the mother’s family or the father’s one. And of course, if this is
not diffiult enough, you will always have a formal and an informal way to say
it.
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
About writing characters.
Remember I am a new chinese student. I do my best with chinese writing. If you want to widen your information, here you have some flash web pages:
Friday, 22 November 2013
Lesson 7: Greetings.
Well, let’s
begin interaction with chinese world.
What are
the different ways of greet among chinese population?
- To say hello: 你好 / Nǐ hǎo/
This is the
base form, but you must change the pronouns depending on the receiver. So,
we have:
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
Some notes about viewing.
Someone has told me that he can't see chinese characters in the posts. This must be because he hasn't got chinese language installed in the computer.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Lesson 5: nationalities and languages 1.
Memorizing, memorizing, memorizing…
Let’s go
with countries, nationalities and languages.
As writing
is so difficult and in order not to overwhelm us, I have just included a few
countries. In fact, in classes we have only learnt Spain ,
China , England and Germany ,
but I have added a couple more: France
and USA .
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Relax
Well,
memorising all this feds me up so let’s make a break and chat.
I suppose
you have realised that all the materials in this blog are ordered in five
different topics. If you have a closer look page numbers are correlative and it
forms four different books:
Lesson 6: Mustknow.
It is now the turn for these completely necessary words in any language. In an occidental language this would not be the topic for one lesson, but with Chinese… we have to resign.
Those mustknow that I mean are: yes, no, thanks, please….
Friday, 1 November 2013
Lesson 4: pronouns.
Let’s begin with something a bit more difficult: subject and
object pronouns.
In Chinese they use the same form for the subject pronoum
and the object pronoun.
Friday, 25 October 2013
Friday, 18 October 2013
Lesson 2: The days of the week.
Let’s go on with another listing.
You may learn the week by counting.
You say week星期/Xīngqí/
Friday, 11 October 2013
Lesson 1: numbers 1 to 99.
There is always a good beginning for a foreign language:
numbers.
In Chinese numbers follow decimal rules strictly, that is:
- For units we have numbers for 0 to 10.
- From 10 on we count as follows: tens + TEN + units
You can see the following attached files:
Friday, 4 October 2013
Presentation.
Mi name is Mar. I live in a small village in Ourense (Spain)
and I like learning (nearly no matter what). This year I am determined to start
with the difficult goal of learning Chinese. I have never visited China, though
it is in my list, but I have travelled to several Asian countries with a huge
amount of Chinese population. I am in love with Asia and that is the main
reason why I want to learn the language.
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