The two
characters above mean ¡°Chinese Characters¡±. Chinese
Characters are the founding block/unit of Chinese language,
because one or more Chinese characters form words, phrases,
and sentences, etc.
The number
of Chinese characters can be a little overwhelming, but it
helps keep Chinese overall a simply structured language.
We start by discussing the pronunciation of Chinese
Characters. There are two aspects of Chinese characters¡¯
pronunciation to learn about.
1. Phonics - Pinyin
Invariably, each Chinese character's pronunciation is either
a consonant followed by one or two vowels (always in this
order) or one or two vowels only. In an analogy, Chinese
characters all sound a bit like "La", "Di", "Da".
And generally the pronunciation of each Chinese character
lasts about the same length in a sentence. So roughly, a
Chinese sentence sounds like "he saw me", "I know you", or
"who can sing?", if read flatly.
The
phonics system for Chinese characters is called Pinyin. We
will introduce Pinyin in much detail starting from Class 3.
2. Four
Tones
Each Chinese character has one vowel, and each vowel, in
turn, has a tone with it. Many characters should have
different tones for different meanings, but most have unique
tones in all situations.
There are
4 possible tones: 4 major tones and a "light" tone.
Conventionally, the major tones are labeled as following.
Tone 1: flat
Tone 2: up
Tone 3: curve
Tone 4: down
The 5th
tone is called "light" tone, which has no number as label.
Characters with light tone should be pronounced light and
fast, the only exceptions to the previous rule that all
characters in a sentence lasts about the same long.
We will
introduce how to pronounce the four tones in the next
class. It is important to remember that Chinese character¡¯s
tone has nothing to do with its meaning.