User:Remsense/sandbox

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Remsense/sandbox
The Dacheng Hall, the main hall of the Temple of Confucius in Qufu
Chinese儒家
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinRújiā
Wu
Romanization6zy-ka
Quipu
Type
Other
Time period
c. 2600 BC – c. 1600 AD
RegionAndes
Quipu in the Museo Machu Picchu, Casa Concha, Cusco
Functional classification of marks
Meaningful Phonetic Classification
No No
Yes No Sign
No Yes Phonographic writing
Yes Yes Morphographic writing

lvl 3

v3FA

Last updated on Mon, 19 Aug 2024 04:49:51 +0000. Regenerate this table or edit the query.

Title Page ID Namespace Size (bytes) Last change
Tang dynasty 58080 1 52380 20240815104728
Han dynasty 196517 1 23550 20240712030052
Shen Kuo 10213840 1 60924 20240609203135
Genghis Khan 24761185 1 55792 20240816084058

v3GA

Last updated on Mon, 19 Aug 2024 04:47:16 +0000. Regenerate this table or edit the query.

Title Page ID Namespace Size (bytes) Last change
Hong Kong 221174 1 4947 20240816125106
World War II 240572 1 25617 20240818181413
Chinese characters 333358 1 24692 20240728054043
Marco Polo 44608308 1 27696 20240725172148

lvl 4

v4FA

Last updated on Mon, 19 Aug 2024 04:46:30 +0000. Regenerate this table or edit the query.

Title Page ID Namespace Size (bytes) Last change
Ming dynasty 163176 1 15662 20240712025911
Du Fu 338604 1 1364 20240329224351
Song dynasty 507601 1 13591 20240421131938
Cannon 889205 1 57454 20240817124401
Cai Lun 1601635 1 4919 20240717174327
Peking opera 3662831 1 5335 20240104232135
Zhang Heng 7357928 1 12077 20240309061944
Tiger 15951826 1 20507 20240819033045

v4GA

Last updated on Mon, 19 Aug 2024 04:48:36 +0000. Regenerate this table or edit the query.

Title Page ID Namespace Size (bytes) Last change
Giant panda 12715 1 12245 20240806151311
Sun Tzu 170451 1 44487 20240105065530
Snow leopard 176836 1 27007 20240618150007
Shanghai 306295 1 4516 20240710092912
Three Gorges Dam 473448 1 3370 20240710150604
Wong Kar-wai 954552 1 12813 20240105072030
Liao dynasty 5606186 1 26770 20240105041016
Maudgalyayana 10226241 1 14093 20240105041311
I Ching 11199844 1 8934 20240220115030
Zhuangzi 24457945 1 4648 20240801124148
COVID-19 pandemic 62755640 1 24553 20240806131244

stems

文.
Smith, J. (1999). The Big Book.
Remsense/sandbox
Usage
Writing systemChinese characters
TypeLogographic 
(pictographic)
Language of originChinese
Lexicographic position1–10
Time periodc. 1250 BCE – present
Other
Associated graphsEarthly Branches

Box

a

Examples of tonal spelling in Gwoyeu Romatzyh[1]
Tone 1 Tone 2 Tone 3 Tone 4
'corrupt' 'pluck' 'blanket' 'charcoal'
GR tan tarn taan tann
Pinyin tān tán tǎn tàn
'superior' 'oil' 'to have' 'rightward'
GR iou you yeou yow
Pinyin yōu yóu yǒu yòu
'gentle' 'sentiment' 'invite' 'celebrate'
GR ching chyng chiing chinq
Pinyin qīng qíng qǐng qìng


  • Sampson, Geoffrey (2016). "Writing systems: Methods for recording language". In Allan, Keith (ed.). The Routledge Handbook of Linguistics. London: Routledge. pp. 47–61. ISBN 978-0-415-83257-1.
  • Meletis, Dimitrios (2020). The Nature of Writing: A Theory of Grapholinguistics. Grapholinguistics and Its Applications. Vol. 3. Brest: Fluxus. doi:10.36824/2020-meletis. ISBN 978-2-957-05492-3.
  • Pankenier, David W. (2011). "Getting "Right" with Heaven and the Origins of Writing in China". In Li, Feng; Branner, David Prager (eds.). Writing and Literacy in Early China: Studies from the Columbia Early China Seminar. Seattle: University of Washington Press. pp. 19–50. ISBN 978-0-295-80450-7. JSTOR j.ctvcwng4z.7.
Traditional forms before 1956

'fish'

'shall'

'snow'

'vision'
1956–1964
1977–1978
𫜹
1978–present


  • Lundbæk, Knud (1988). The Traditional History of the Chinese Script: From a Seventeenth Century Jesuit Manuscript. Aarhus University Press. ISBN 978-8-772-88179-9.

There was a common preoccupation during the Classical period with names (; míng); from the Shuowen Jiezi (c. 100 CE) onward, there was also a clear notion of characters (; ).[2] The first clear indication of Chinese authors articulating a concept of "words" is in the translation of and commentary on Sanskrit Buddhist texts during the 5th century.[3] While written characters were always discretized and always correspond one-to-one with monosyllabic morphemes, abstract segments of language like (), (yán), and (wén) are not consistently defined from text to text, as they are for modern Chinese writers.[4]

Extralinguistic use

  • Bréard, Andrea (2001). "On Mathematical Terminology". In Lackner, Michael; Amelung, Iwo; Kurtz, Joachim (eds.). New Terms for New Ideas. Sinica Leidensia. Vol. 52. Brill. pp. 305–327. ISBN 978-9-004-12046-4.
  • Needham, Joseph; Wang, Ling, eds. (1995) [1959]. Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth. Science and Civilisation in China. Vol. III. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-05801-8.
  • Taylor, Insup; Olson, David R., eds. (1995). Scripts and Literacy. Neuropsychology and Cognition. Vol. 7. Dordrecht: Springer. ISBN 978-9-401-04506-3.
  • Gunn, Edward M. (1991). Rewriting Chinese: Style and Innovation in Twentieth-Century Chinese Prose. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-804-7-1599-7.
  • Coblin, W. South (2000). "A Brief History of Mandarin". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 120 (4): 537–552. ISSN 0003-0279. JSTOR 606615.
  1. ^ Adapted from Simmons 2015.
  2. ^ Bottéro, Françoise (2024). "A lexical and contrastive analysis of 字". Journal of Chinese Writing Systems. doi:10.1177/25138502241242809. ISSN 2513-8502.
  3. ^ Geaney 2022, p. 5.
  4. ^ Geaney 2022, pp. 23–31.