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| Oh, China! Elementary Reader of Modern Chinese for Advanced Beginners |
Oh, China! is a textbook for the growing number of "advanced beginners" who are studying Mandarin Chinese. These are students who, usually because of their Chinese family backgrounds, can speak and understand elementary Mandarin, but cannot read or write well enough for an intermediate course. Most first-year texts serve advanced beginners poorly by focusing on elementary vocabulary and conversation that the students already know. In contrast, this book offers help with what they most need: reading and writing, grammar, and achievement of standard pronunciation. The content of the lessons has also been chosen to appeal specifically to advanced beginners. There are three clusters of topics: the home and social life of young Chinese- Americans, the notions of "overseas Chinese" and their ties to China, and important figures in modern Chinese history. Each lesson is given in both traditional and simplified characters, and, for the first fifteen lessons, in hanyu pinyin as well. The lessons are accompanied by vocabulary lists, grammar notes, usage exercises, and character stroke-order charts. The book begins with a detailed chapter on "foundation work" in Mandarin pronunciation, complete with exercises. It concludes with a complete Chinese-to-English vocabulary index. Oh, China! is designed for one year's study at the college level and will prepare students to enter third-year courses. The latest in a series of Chinese language texts published by Princeton University Press, it will meet an important and growing need in the teaching and study of Mandarin. Audio and video materials are available for use with this text. For further information, contact the Chinese Linguistics Project, 231 Palmer Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. 08544. (609-258-4269).
49.5
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| Tags:
china, chinese, beginners, advanced |
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Opinionist: Bill and Warren's Excellent (Chinese) Adventure
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This article also appeared on The China Beat and was republished with permission here. It is written by Caroline Reeves, Assistant Professor of History at Emmanuel College. Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are throwing a charity banquet in Beijing. On September 29th, the two American tycoons will host a dinner for China’s wealthiest magnates to convince them to give their monies away
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MKRide Ride Report: Enduro Training in Germany
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Our good photographer friend, Ryan Pyle , is on an epic journey through all of China with his brother, Colin. Called MKRide, the 60-day journey hopes to raise funds for SEVA , a charitable foundation that finds solutions for health problems in lower income communities around the world. They've asked Shanghaiist to publish the tales from their journey, and being fans of both long trips
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Weekendist: Drag Queens, Comedy and BEAN Shanghai's bday!
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Once again it’s Friday and the end of the working week is nigh! If you embraced last weekend and followed our Weekendist guide, you would have been run ragged - get ready to do it again, because boy is Shanghai delivering! This weekend is serving up a rather eclectic mix of entertainment; drag queens, food fests and birthday parties - just to give you a rough idea. As always, use this
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WooChinese Does Q&A | Sinosplice
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My friend John Biesnecker has been working hard on a new site called WooChinese. He’s been covering a lot of topics related to learning Chinese, and has been specifically addressing some of the big questions that absolute beginners to the language...
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If you're beating a "petitioner," make sure it's not an official's wife
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Policemen in Hubei have actually apologized for beating "a petitioner" ... because it wasn't a petitioner at all. Rather, poor Mrs. Chen Yulian, 58, was the wife of a Hubei provincial politics and law committee official who was walking to the gate of the provincial party committee's office buildings on June 23. Southern Metropolis Daily investigated when it appeared as a hot story on the
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Li Na and Zheng Jie make tennis history down under
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Li Na (李娜) and Zheng Jie (郑洁) reached the quarterfinals of this year's Australian Open, currently going on. Today, Li Na, the number 16 seed, advanced by defeating the world's number 4, Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark, 6-4, 6-3. However, Li is not the first Chinese woman to reach the quarterfinals at the Australian Open. That honor goes to Zheng Jie, who by sheer luck, played her match
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ZTE, UCell To Launch LTE Network In Uzbekistan
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Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE has announced that it has cooperated with the Uzbekistan cellular communications provider UCell in the launch of a LTE network in Tashkent, capital of Uzbekistan. The construction of the network is based on ZTE's UniRAN solution using the advanced SDR technology. The network can support LTE services, including high definition [...]
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