Mandarin Chinese learning resources + guide

James Herbsaint

sourced from https://0bin.net/paste/WU2Dbogu#r3-9xwpooF4xVEgpN8a+CK1L5i4eeyUgjN30Rb+ysHx and minimally edited for formatting

(introduction)

contact info: neongenesist@gmail.com (I won't answer this)
twitter @oldking420
ฅ(ミ꒡⋏꒡ミ)∫ʕ¯ᴥ¯oʔ (ง`_´)ง
#+beginexample 意思

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  1. Structure and Goals: In my experience many people have a sort of general impression that actually learning Mandarin is a task vastly more difficult than say, Spanish, or German. and I think its important to know that I think that's absolutely not true, but I do think Mandarin Chinese requires a different approach. For a variety of linguistic n phonetic reasons it is not really feasible to expect to attain the foundations needed to begin to work towards real fluency by casually picking up some characters and phrases through apps like duolingo or skritter. Because Mandarin is a tonal language the phonemic elements used vary significantly from English (on the pinyin chart a total of 56) which are inflected tonally. this means to seriously learn Mandarin you need to first learn these foundations. So the first and most important goal you have should be to assess what your own personal goals are in terms of what level of language ability you want to achieve and how much time you're going to spend and when. This doesn't mean you have to have an absolutely set study plan at all times for X hours a week but rather that you have a vision of your short n longer-term goals (500 characters? a few basic words? conversational fluency and the HSK?) The reason I emphasize this so much is because it is most significant during the beginning of your studies if you're new to Mandarin. A more piecemeal general approach to reading shit online, watching movies, etc comes later. but imo with serious attention to your foundations you really can make serious and significant progress towards practical fluency way faster than you imagine.

  2. Study Material Selection: It is absolutely essential that you use a variety of tools, texts, and materials in your study! You can't just study characters and do worksheets from one single textbook. Specifically I cannot overemphasize the importance of LISTENING and SPEAKING practice. You gotta listen to stuff, listen to as much as you can, ideally almost as much as you study written materials, because you need to train your ear to parse tones and meaning at the speed people actually speak and compare your own to them. textual fluency alone will not translate to speaking ability or comprehension skills but being able to actually listen, comprehend, and accurately speak mandarin (even if just a few phrases) WILL support your writing/reading ability. There are lots of ways to practice listening such as textbook audio CD/QR code files, pinyin chart tables, tone recordings, spoken lessons and more that will be listed below. The question of how to get good speaking practice is a bit more difficult, but still not impossible! At the most basic level you should speak aloud as you study and attempt to copy/repeat/memorize sentences and passages from audio/video speakers but there are also methods to practice speaking with real chinese speakers: video/audio-call tutor practice services are offered by many universities and priv companies for a lot less than you would think (esp if they are based in China.) Depending on where you live you might have access to a Confucius Institute, China Institute, or student university group. You can also also join other practice groups in various Mandarin learning communities online like the chinese language stackexchange, the chinese grammar wiki forums, twitter, even uhh 4chan has a group on int i think. reddit is probably good for this too i guess, if you're gay lol

  3. "Desire." You have to have a reason to want to study Chinese if you actually wanna stick with it in the long term. this is obvious of course, but more specifically you have to have some motivating content to 'CONSUME' to keep you at it, basically anything is fine–political news, literature, history, chinese cosplay pornography, biaoqing memes, wuxia movies, mao, whatever. find something or ideally multiple somethings and stick with it.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES, BONUS CONTENT, FUN STUFF

apps?

yall want apps? oh we GOT apps. Actually even though there are a huge amount of Mandarin learning apps out there I think the vast majority of them are basically useless or only marginally helpful. if you end up downloading one of those chinese handwriting finger apps and its helpful for you then I'm glad but I have never found much value in them. there is however one app that is absolutely ESSENTIAL: PLECO. this is seriously probably the best app ever made for anything. Pleco functions as your dual language chinese–english dictionary, can scan and translate text with your camera, lets you save new characters to custom flashcard folders and also allows you to export these lists to your PC. it also lets you hand draw-in characters you can write but dont know how to read, allows you to sort words by their constituent radical elements, and more. Also definitely the only app I can say I have EVER paid for a full version of, which grants a massively increased rare words dictionary, classical chinese definitions and dictionary, cantonese readings, and more. a (pleco)stomus is a type of fish ><(((*>

flashcards?

anki is a really good program for language learning flashcards but for a very specific but significant reason I personally prefer to use quizlet specifically for Chinese which is why I'm going to recommend it over Anki: when you write flashcard word lists on quizlet there is an auto-detect definition fill for Mandarin chinese specifically which saves a tremendous amount of time since you don't have to switch language keyboards and write the chinese characters out for each card. This may not seem significant if you are a beginner but by the time you reach the level of 3000+ characters known writing a 200 character list faster is a big deal. also quizlet lets you share your lists with other people so if you want to download public study lists you can (or download mine, message me and I'll gladly hand em over.) but if that time saving difference or shared lists function doesn't matter to you then Anki is just as good.

fun stuff??

canonical mandarin language corpus
http://corpus.zhonghuayuwen.org/

Chinese Text Project
https://ctext.org/
open-access digital library of historical Chinese texts. 30k+ titles, 5 billion characters or more, the single largest pre-modern Chinese database!!

a basic chinese web dictionary
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary

on learning literary/classical chinese
http://home.uchicago.edu/~jcarlsen/academics/essays/litchin.html

tharsen's own chinese language learning resources (some of these links are old and broken but this guy has SO MUCH SHIT. his site is weird so u need to navigate to the links section from the main page, there is no unique URL For the resources tab)
http://tharsen.net/

–wikipedia list of mandarin chinese bad words
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_Chinese_profanity

chinese anime girl hell
https://www.bilibili.com/