Thursday, January 24, 2013

Learning Mandarin





Sign outside Shanghai #3 Girls'School
What do you think this old Chinese pictograph means?
Mandarin Chinese is one of the most widely spoken languages in the world, almost a billion people speak it!  Chinese is written using characters, a language of pictographs. Lucky for us, Pinyin is also a way of writing Chinese using the Roman alphabet. Because the pinyin system was officially adopted in China in 1958, we can read the letters and understand the written sounds of Mandarin when it is written in Pinyin.  Learning how to pronounce the words and using the right tones is the challenge.

Example:
Ni hao  (nee how) Hello  We can understand the consonant sounds, we just need to know how to pronounce the vowels and blend sounds correctly and of course we need to study vocabulary and sentence structure.
 Xin nian kuai le! (sheen nee-ehn kwaee-luh)  Happy New Year!

The subway  is packed!

Leaving the subway is also crowded.
 I, Jeanie,  started taking Mandarin classes six weeks ago.  I go every weekday from 9:00-12:30.  I can either take the subway (takes 20 min.),


  Or I can walk to school through Jingan Temple Park! 
Dancing in large or small groups is a daily sight in the park
People in the park doing their eye exercises, really!
Jingan Temple a midst high rises



Shanghai Center









I-Mandarin is the name of my Chinese Program.  We meet at the Shanghai Center.




 My group class consists of Charlie from Australia and me.  Our teacher is fantastic!  She is energetic, explains things well in English, expects us to converse in Chinese, and holds us to high standards.


Charlie and Laoshi (teacher)

Laoshi, Ling Yen

Jeanie's essay in pinyin about where she lives.










Ling Yen gives us homework every night and we write three essays per week, not with Chinese characters, but in Pinyin (Roman alphabet).


Learning Chinese has been fun, yet challenging.  The minute I think I know something, I practice it with a shopkeeper, and most times, they don't understand what I'm saying. The four tones to the Chinese language are really difficult.


 However, I am beginning to make a little sense, so I keep trying!  Ken had success yesterday when he asked the waiter, Qing, maidan  (Cheeng, my dahn.)  Bill, please! He indeed got the bill.

I will continue to take Mandarin lessons through out 2013.  The cost is about $15 per hour for a group class, only 2 of us in the group, sort of like private tutoring

Practice:

Ni Hao Ma? ( Nee how ma) How are you?
Most people respond:  Hen hao  (hen how)  = very well
or try this fun word:

Mamahuhu  (mamahoohoo)= so, so (direct translation is horse, horse, tiger, tiger:)

Another useful phrase is:
Duo shao qian?  (doo oh shaow chee-en)  How much is it?
If you don't understand the response, just point to shopkeeper's big calculator. And then punch in a price that is much less than the asked price.  From there, your bargaining begins!

Much of Mandarin is very logical:
Dian= electricity
Dianti= elevator (electric ladder)
Diannao= laptop (electric brain)
Dianying= movie (electric shadow)


Confucius Temple  Neighborhood  in Nanjing
It's been a privilege to be able to spend my days learning another language and culture. It's exciting and frustrating all at the same time.

"Learning is a treasure that will follow its owner everywhere."  ~Chinese proverb

Nanjing, former Chinese capital, at night
Zai jian (zy jee -en)  See you again,

Jeanie
Lanterns of Nanjing



Next time:  Chinese New Year, the year of the Snake








2 comments:

  1. Jeanie, nice to hear how your language classes are going. What is your class schedule like these days? When are you around Nanjing Xilu to meet for lunch?

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  2. Looks like a lot of fun. What an adventure. I'm glad you're learning a new language. . .

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