Electronic/World Wide Web>Blog:  Moser, David (8/19/2006), The “Invisible” Writing on the Wall, Retrieved on 2014-07-23
  • Source Material [cognitive-china.blogspot.com]
  • Folksonomies: sinology

    Memes

    23 JUL 2014

     提笔忘字

    The most astounding example I encountered back in my early days studying Chinese was during a lunch with three graduate students in the Peking University Chinese department. I had a bad cold that day, and wanted to write a note to a friend to cancel a meeting. I found that I couldn’t write the character ti 嚔 in the word for “sneeze”, da penti 打喷嚔, and so I asked my three friends for help. To my amazement, none of the three could successfully retrieve the character ti 嚔. Three ...
    Folksonomies: mandarin chinese sinology
    Folksonomies: mandarin chinese sinology
      1  notes

    "Forget the word Pen"

    23 JUL 2014

     Chinese Books Lack an Index

    Yet even if some technological fix were to be devised to solve the problem of character entry, the non-alphabetic nature of the writing system still results in other serious and long-standing “invisible” problems. For example, the inclusion of a standard index to books, manuals and reference materials is made orders of magnitude more difficult by the Chinese writing system. The result is that to this day, the vast majority of non-fiction books published in China do not have an index, or a...
    Folksonomies: writing chinese sinology
    Folksonomies: writing chinese sinology
      1  notes
     

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