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         Chinese Language:     more books (100)
  1. The Chinese Language for Beginners. by Lee Cooper, 1971-06
  2. Ultimate Chinese (Mandarin) Beginner-Intermediate (CD/Book) (LL(R) Ultimate Basic-Intermed) by Living Language, 2004-08-24
  3. SPEAK E-Z CHINESE In Phonetic English by Fang Zhao, Timothy Green, 2006-07-01
  4. Baby's First Words in Chinese (Baby's First Words) by Living Language, 2007-05-22
  5. Conversational Mandarin Chinese: Learn to Speak and Understand Mandarin with Pimsleur Language Programs (Simon & Schuster's) by Pimsleur, 2005-11-01
  6. Teaching Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Heritage Language Students: Curriculum Needs, Materials, and Assessment (Esl & Applied Linguistics Professional)
  7. Chinese Phrases For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature)) by Wedny Abraham, 2005-09-16
  8. First 100 Chinese Characters: Simplified Character, Quick & Easy Method to Learn the 100 Most Basic Chinese Characters (Tuttle Language Library) by LAWRENCE & ALISON MATTHEWS, 2007-01-30
  9. Chinese : A Language Map (Language Map Series) by Kristine K. Kershul, 2001-05-01
  10. Reading and Writing Chinese: A Guide to the Chinese Writing System by William McNaughton, Li Ying, 1999-09
  11. The Chinese Language: Its History And Current Usage by Daniel Kane, 2006-09-30
  12. Chinese Language and Culture by Weijia Huang, Qun Ao, 2003-03-15
  13. Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy by John DeFrancis, 1984-10-01
  14. Teaching And Learning Chinese As a Foreign Language: A Pedagogical Grammar by Janet Zhiqun Xing, 2006-03-30

161. Yan Qu - Home Page
Carnegie Mellon University. Information retrieval, extraction and management, natural language processing, chinese computing, dialog and discourse processing, machine translation, cooperative humancomputer interaction.
http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~yqu/
Yan Qu, PhD
Language Technology Institute
School of Computer Science

Carnegie Mellon University

Email:
yqu@cs.cmu.edu Current Contact Address
Clairvoyance Corporation (formerly Claritech Corp.)

5001 Baum Boulevard, Suite 700
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-1854
tel: 412-621-0570 ext 320
fax: 412-621-0569
Email:
yqu@claritech.com or y.qu@clairvoyancecorp.com
Research interests
Information retrieval, extraction and management, natural language processing, Chinese computing, dialog and discourse processing, machine translation, cooperative human-computer interaction. click here for my papers and presentations

162. Home
Calendar, language school, dance theater, special groups, scholarships, and donations.
http://www.caam.org/

163. Zi Corporation
Holding company with subsidiaries which develop and market chinese characterbased language applications.
http://www.zicorp.com/
Zi Corporation to unveil unique text entry innovations for the Asian market at CommunicAsia Zi Corporation Reports First Quarter Results Zi Corporation Announces First Quarter Results Release and Conference Call Date
Legal Notice
(Updated December 2003). Contact the Webmaster: webmaster@zicorp.com

164. Chines Australian Services Society
Has resources for chinese Australians including immigrant assistance programs, language classes, education grants, and financial services.
http://www.cass.net.au/
Please click here to view the non-framed version.

165. Multilingual Translation Software Store - Offers Dictionary, Language And Transl
Offers dictionary, language and translation software for English, French, Spanish, German, Japanese, chinese, Russian, Ukrainian, Italian, and Portuguese.
http://www.allvirtualware.com/
Multilingual Translation Software www.allvirtualware.com - a source of language translation software Online Stores Spanish French German

166. Language Learning - English And Chinese
A dictionary with pronunciation and pictures
http://www.web-books.com/language/
eLibrary Home Languages Interactive Audio-Picture English Lessons Interactive Audio-Picture Chinese Lessons (simplified) Interactive Audio-Picture Chinese Lessons (traditional)

167. Welcome To Qmail
The summary for this page contains characters that cannot be properly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.chinese.qmail.org/

168. NACCL-16
2123 May 2004, Iowa City, Iowa, USA. Focuses on all theoretical and research areas (including language acquisition) of chinese linguistics. Registration, accommodation, program, maps and directions.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~asian/naccl/

169. So You Want To Learn Chinese ?
Includes FAQ, hints and tips for learning the language, book reviews and basic learning methods, plus information on viewing and writing chinese for users of UNIX and Linux.
http://www.lintech.org/chinese/
Learning Chinese

So you want to learn Chinese....
These pages should be useful to those contemplating, or attempting to learn Mandarin Chinese (putonghua), the language of the People's Republic of China, through self-study. At the current time there are two pages: Learning Chinese : review of books and learning materials and notes on methodology [16 kbytes] Learning Chinese FAQ frequently asked questions about studying Mandarin, and about these pages [33 kbytes]

170. When You Ask The Average Sinologist Intersted In Historical Linguistics What He
Paper on how old chinese became an (almost) natural language.
http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/gpc/behr/HTML/Excellence.htm
(Book presentation paper for BMBF workshop "Foundations of Excellence in East Asian Studies")
Odds on the Odes — how Old Chinese became an (almost) natural language in 1992 "Je moderner die moderne Welt wird, desto unvermeidlicher werden die Geisteswissenschaften" ——
If there ever was such a thing — and blessed we are that there is not! — as a Gallup (or even an Allensbach) poll conducted among sinologists interested in philology or historical linguistics and asking for the single most important work "in the field" this century, chances are that Bernhard Karlgren’s Grammata Serica Recensa 1957) would still come off "top o’ the heap". Indeed, the " GSR , a rather unwieldy and arcane dictionary of Chinese characters encountered in Archaic and Ancient texts and inscriptions, ordered according to a principle of shared phonetic elements in sets of related characters, which only became tangible by a cryptic procedure of phonetic reconstruction, was certainly a true milestone of sinology. It was an awe-inspiring achievement, not only as a dictionary — the only dictionary of pre-modern Chinese, as some would say

171. WWW Audio Tutorial Of Basic Chinese
Audio Tutorial of Survival chinese. Teachers (K12) How to say "Hi" in chinese? What would you say when you are invited by a chinese friend or vice versa
http://www.wku.edu/~yuanh/AudioChinese
Audio Tutorial of Survival Chinese
Teachers (K-12) (New)
Thanks to "
Parenting
Adoptive parents now can learn to say "I love you," "I am your Mommy," "It's bed time," and "No, you may not date until you are thirty-five!"
Greeting
How to say "Hi" in Chinese? What would you say when you are invited by a Chinese friend or vice versa? When introduced, how would you meet with your new Chinese friends? And finally, how to say "Bye"?
Shopping
Shopping is fun but always full of adventure, especially in a different culture. How to strike a good deal and get what you want? A few Chinese may be able to help prevent you from being ripped off.
Dining
Chinese food is yummy. Knowing a few Chinese expressions will make you enjoy your meals, and the more importantly, the experience all the more.
Traveling
Do you hate package tour? With a little necessary Chinese vocabulary, you will be able to embark on your own tour of Chinese alleys and villages and come ever closer with the people you will meet.
How to ask time, day, date, month, season and weather? Do you want to say some of the Chinese holidays and translations of some of the Western holidays such as Christmas?

172. Chinese Culture
style of Shanghai. Xintiandi is an example to foreigners it seems very European; to local chinese it is very modern. To old people
http://chineseculture.about.com/
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About China Online Home Essentials ... Daily News zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Arts Chinese Language Entertainment Geography ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
Stay Current
Subscribe to the About China Online newsletter. Search China Online From Jun Shan
Your Guide to China Online
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Confucius Reenters Mainstream Culture
Students of the Experimental Primary School of Qufu city, east China's Shandong Province, do one thing together every day before morning classes they read in chorus the Analects of Confucius (551-479 BC). Read the story
Monday June 07, 2004
Beijing's Building Revolution
"In the run-up to the 2008 Olympics, Beijing is changing its public face, with the world's most expensive and innovative architects designing a new crop of projects which are sweeping away swathes of the old city." Read the story
Monday June 07, 2004

Xun - the Sound of China
"The Xun is an Ancient Chinese wind instrument with a history of more than 7,000 years. The Xun is mostly made from clay, but there are also instruments made from bone and stone. It looks like a large egg with several holes in it and used to serve as the main wind instrument in China’s imperial orchestra." Read the story
Saturday June 05, 2004

173. »ªÁªÑÇͨ---Èí¼þ¿ª·¢
Translation (Englishchinese, English-Japanese, English-German, English-Korean ), web design, software development, multi-languages database design, website(software)localization.
http://www.icansoido.com
ENGLISH http://www.icansoido.com
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174. USC Chinese Department

http://www.usc.edu/dept/ealc/chinese/newweb/character_page.html

175. Chinese At Wake Forest University, East Asian Languages And Literatures
Wake Forest University. East Asian Languages and Literatures, chinese, Patrick Edwin Moran. Revised as of 200300830 Under Reconstruction, sorry.
http://www.wfu.edu/~moran/
Wake Forest University
East Asian Languages and Literatures, Chinese, Patrick Edwin Moran
Revised as of 200300830: Under Reconstruction, sorry.
  • Old Version of this website.
  • Enter the maze, beginning at the Student Pavilion.
  • Enter the maze, beginning at the Philosophers' Grove. You may find Confucius, Zhu Xi, and many other thinkers teaching there.
  • Enter the maze, beginning at the Cathay Cafe. Here you will find cultural elements great and small, such as: Chinese musical scales, Chinese characters, the mirror image of the Western days of the week found in the China of antiquity. Since it was created, this page has received 55,963 visits.
  • Created: Thursday, 17-Aug-95
  • Last modified: 30 August 2003
  • 176. Asian Sign Languages
    Links to bibliographic entries for thirteen Asian Sign Languages Australasian, chinese (CSL), Hong Kong (HKSL), Indian (INS), Indonesian, Japanese (JSL), Korean (KVK), Malaysian (BMT), Nepalese (NSP), Philippine (PSP), Sri Lankan (SQS), Taiwanese (TSS) and Thai (TSQ). Fulltext articles not included.
    http://www.sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de/bibweb/Keywords/Asian_sl.html
    keywords linguistics sign language linguistics sign language ... national sign languages Asian Sign Languages

      Australasian Sign Language
      Chinese Sign Language (CSL)
      Hong Kong Sign Language (HKSL)
      Indian Sign Language (INS)
      Indonesian Sign Language
      Japanese Sign Language (JSL)
      Korean Sign Language (KVK)
      Malaysian Sign Language (BMT)
      Nepal Sign Language (NSP)
      Philippine Sign Language (PSP) Sri Lankan Sign Language (SQS) Taiwanese Sign Language (TSS) Thai Sign Language (TSQ)
    back to keywords

    177. WebFactorial Corporation
    Contract web development services including application development, acceptance testing, translation services, and creative design. Languages include Japanese, chinese, Korean, Spanish, German, and French.
    http://www.webfactorial.com/

    178. Middlebury College: Error 404
    According to your browser, the link you were trying to reach is this one http//www.middlebury.edu/lis/lib/chinese.htm We apologize that it is unavailable and
    http://www.middlebury.edu/~lib/chinese.html
    WebMail BannerWeb People Finder Site Map ... Campus Life
    Page Not Accessible - Error 404
    We're sorry, the page you are attempting to access has been removed, had its name changed or is temporarily unavailable.
    You will be redirected to the Middlebury College Home Page in a few seconds or you may click below. Middlebury College Home Page The College's main phone number is: 802-443-5000 For general questions or information about Middlebury, please contact the Office of Public Affairs at midd@middlebury.edu For admissions related questions , please contact the Admisssions Office at admissions@middlebury.edu or 802-443-3000. For web-related assistance , please contact Web Services at webmaster@middlebury.edu If you believe you have gotten this message in error, or have other questions about the Middlebury College Web site, please contact Web Services at (802) 443-5480 or webmaster@middlebury.edu In order to best assist you, please note where you were (ie. the URL) on the Middlebury Web site when you received this message and what you attempted to access. Thank You. Middlebury College - Middlebury, Vermont 05753 - 802-443-5000

    179. Chinese
    At that time dragon bones were often used in chinese medicine and were usually animal fossils. contents . The chinese writing system.
    http://www.omniglot.com/writing/chinese.htm
    Writing systems: alphabetic syllabic logographic ... A-Z index
    Chinese script
    Origins of writing in China
    Most linguists believe that writing was invented in China during the latter half of the 2nd millenium BC and that there is no evidence to suggest the transmission of writing from elsewhere. The earliest recognisable examples of written Chinese date from 1500-950 BC (Shang dynasty) and were inscribed on ox scapulae and turtle shells - "oracle bones". In 1899 a scholar from Beijing named Wang Yirong noticed symbols that looked like writing on some "dragon bones" which he had been prescribed by a pharmacy. At that time "dragon bones" were often used in Chinese medicine and were usually animal fossils. Many more "oracle bones" were found in the ruins of the Shang capital near Anyang in the north of Henan province. The script on these "oracle bones" is known as 甲骨文 (jiăgŭwén) - literally "shell bone writing". They were used for divination, a process which involved heating them then inspecting the resulting cracks to determine to answers to one's questions. The bones were then inscribed with details of the questions and the answers. Most of the questions involved hunting, warfare, the weather and the selection of auspicious days for ceremonies.

    180. Asian Languages & Literature At The University Of Washington
    The department offers undergraduate degrees in chinese, Japanese, Korean, and South Asian languages and literature, and graduate degree programs in chinese
    http://depts.washington.edu/asianll/
    Welcome to the Department of Asian Languages and Literature
    The Department of Asian Languages and Literature offers instruction in the principal languages and literatures of Asia, including East, Southeast, Central, and South Asia. Emphasis is placed on the roles of these languages within the cultures they serve as well as on linguistic, textual, and literary analysis. The department offers undergraduate degrees in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and South Asian languages and literature, and graduate degree programs in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, South Asian, and Buddhist Studies.
    Announcements
    Landscapes Imagined and Remembered The University of Washington will sponsor the Thirteenth Annual
    Association for Japanese Literary Studies meeting, October 22-24, 2004.
    For more information about upcoming department events, see our announcements page
    Quick Information...
    For more information about our programs or other aspects of the department, click one of the tabs above or any link below. Home People Course Information Resources ... Site Map
    Some documents may require Adobe Acrobat Reader
    The University of Washington's Department of Asian Languages and Literature does not guarantee
    the accuracy or completeness of information on this web page.

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