Archive for April 11th, 2010

Learn Chinese – Is Chinese hard to learn?

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

4 Reasons Why You Should Learn Chinese?
The first question my students always ask me would be “Is Chinese hard to learn? I would say ‘YES, if you use the wrong method!’, so, for me, Chinese isn’t hard to learn at all, It’s just like when you first watch a magic trick, it’s amazing! But when you know the secret about it, you will master it in the shortest period.

So, why you should learn Chinese? What is the reasons that cause millions of students taking Chinese or Mandarin as their 2nd language?

There are just too many reasons to explain it. First, Chinese is the language of Nearly 1/4 of the World’s Population. Speakers of Chinese not only live in China, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia, but also spread throughout Southeast Asia, North America, and Europe, where large Chinese communities congregate. Basically you can find China town in majority city. Chinese people today have been playing increasingly important roles worldwide,4 out of 10 top corporates in the world are owned by Chinese.

Second, learning Chinese is an extraordinary and agreeable experience through which you can immerse yourself in a different culture. Unlike most languages, Chinese has a unique ideographic writing system, which provides visual comprehensibility. The grammatical structure of Chinese is not only logical, but also pragmatic, related to the particular way of Chinese thinking. Knowledge of the written language opens up the culture of one of the world’s oldest civilizations. Chinese cultural can be trace back to 5000 years ago.

Third, traditional Chinese culture, from Confucianism and Chan Buddhism to martial arts and Chinese cuisine, has an enormous influence on East and Southeast Asian nations. Chinese culture has also greatly inspired the western world through Marco Polo, G. W. Leibniz, Max Weber, Franz Kafka, Andre Malraux, Bertolt Brecht, Ezra Pound, and Luis Borges, among others.

Last, but not least, the People’s Republic of China currently boasts the fastest growing economy in the world and is widely regarded as the potentially biggest global market in the twenty-first century. Proficient speakers of Mandarin Chinese will find jobs in various fields such as business, government, international relations, information technology, tourism, education, translation and much, much more. Of all foreign languages at American universities and colleges, Chinese shows the highest proportional increase in enrollment. With us, you get to have a chance to experience how to learn Chinese, it’s not hard at all.

Many of our site visitors at Learn Chinese For Free .com learn chinese language for the purpose of working in China in the future, as now there are many opportunities to do so. Some people from our site followed our best recommended way to learn Chinese and they’ve successfully achieve certain level in Chinese. A few of our visitors learn Chinese just for challenge, as they believed (but later proven to be wrong) that it is one of the most difficult languages to learn, because with us, Mandarin Chinese is not as difficult as they thought.

Lastly, I wish you all the best in Learning Chinese

Best wishes,

Jayden

Jayden Yap is one of a very influential Chinese Language Expert. Most of the time he would travel around the globe sharing everything about Chinese cultural, chinese language.
He’s good in speaking both English and Chinese and he can easily teach you how you can speak Chinese like anyone can in the shortest time frame.

(Source: LearnChineseForFree.com)

Chinese Culture – Qi Baishi(3)

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

Red Leaves

Qi Baishi made great accomplishments in painting, calligraphy, seal cutting, poetry and literature. His free-hand flower and bird paintings drew on the painting techniques of Xu Wei, Zhu Da, the Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou and Wu Changshuo, thus showing his solid cultural foundation. Meanwhile, he fused Chinese farmers’ lives and sentiments in his paintings; he drew mice, oil lanterns, abacuses, hoes and rakes in his pictures to reveal the farmers’ simple and innocent attributes. He broke through the traditional Chinese painting notion of the bamboo symbolizing modesty and the orchid indicating delicacy.

Gourds

In his painting Chess Game in Bamboo Garden, he drew the chess board and the muck-rake together, a combination which was not seen in previous paintings by any literati artist. Qi Baishi had gone through dramatic changes to become a learned painter. His paintings vividly communicate rural life interests and atmosphere, bringing new content to Chinese literati painting and opening a new chapter in the development of Chinese free sketch flower and bird painting.

Source: chinaculture.org

Chinese Conversation – lesson 773

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

亚克天使

几 年前,我和弗兰西斯卡·帕楚诺共建的爱里斯·亚克水晶公司经历了一个缓落期。那时我们刚雇了几名新员工,心里希望这种低调状态只是暂时的。而同时,我们一 周只需工作四天。为了避免流失百分之二十的劳动力或每周给员工放假回家一天,我们决定给每人发放全周薪金,周一至周四工作,周五则在家乡圣巴巴拉服务。

Add New Post ‹ Learn Chinese — WordPress记得为了了解社区的需要,我给好几家服务公司打过电话。我们分为三组,去服务公司说最有需要的地方。第一周,我所在的小组去一位年迈的乌克兰人家,为他的房子和花园做大扫除。我们到的时候,一位老妇人在门口迎接我们。我们以为她是老人的妻子,而结果她却是他的女儿。她75岁,她父亲已是97岁了!她吩咐了需要做什么后,我们就开始由天花板至地板清洁起房子以及打扫起院子来。当众人为帮助真正有需要的人而在一起团结努力时,一个群组能完成的工作量真是惊人!一日下来,我们完工后,老人的房子由满是尘污变为清洁光亮。

然而那天令我印象最深刻的不是我们做的了不起的清洁工作,而是别的事情。我们刚刚走进那座房子的时候,我注意到房子里所有房间的墙上都挂着非常美丽的水墨画。我问老人的女儿是谁画的。她说是她的父亲,而且他到80岁的时候才开始对艺术产生兴趣!我傻眼了∶这些画是完全可以挂在博物馆里展出的艺术品。当时我三十岁刚出头,不甘于只当个礼品公司的老总,很想做点什么可以好好利用上我那艺术创造力的事。可我一直觉得要在生命中那么的时候做改变太难了。天啊,那天下午,我那点狭隘的信心得到了多大的拓扬!

我们继续在城区一带又服务了几个星期,包括为某人的家做粉刷房屋、为向体能挑战的儿童在赛马会建了一个大看台。我们得到了许多乐趣并做下许多好事,最后还赢得亚克天使的称誉。除了通过帮助他人而获得良好的感觉以外,我们还长期分享了身为这家既关心雇员也关心社区的公司中一员的美好感觉,营造出一股欢乐的工作气氛。

Several years ago, Iris Arc Crystal, a company I co-founded with Francesca Patruno, experienced a 1)lull in business. We had recently hired several new employees and hoped that the 2)slowdown was only temporary. However, in the meantime, we had work enough for only four days of the week. So, instead of letting 20 percent of our work force go or sending them home one day per week, we decided that we would keep everyone on the 3)payroll for the entire week, working from Monday through Thursday, and taking Fridays to do service projects in our hometown of Santa Barbara.

I remember phoning several service agencies to find out what was needed in the community. We divided up into three groups and showed up where the agencies said they most needed us. The first week, the group I was involved with went to a very old 4)Ukrainian gentleman’s home to do a total cleanup of his house and garden. When we arrived, an elderly woman greeted us at the door. We thought she was the wife, but it turned out she was the daughter. She was 75, and her father was 97! She told us what we needed to do, and we proceeded to clean the house from floor to ceiling and clean up the yard as well. It is amazing how much work a group can get done when everyone is working together and being of service to someone who really needs the help. That gentleman’s house went from dirt and 5)dinginess to a 6)sparkling clean palace by the time we finished at the end of the day.

The thing I most remember about that day, however, was not the great cleaning job that we did, but something altogether different. When we first walked into the house, I noticed the wonderful pen-and-ink drawings that 7)adorned the walls in all the rooms of the house. I asked the daughter who had done them. She said that her father had, and that he hadn’t 8)taken up art until he was 80 years old! I was 9)dumbfounded: these drawings were works of art that could have easily been hanging in a museum. At the time, I was in my early 30s and wanted to do something that would 10)utilize my creative and artistic capabilities more than being the president of a giftware company would allow. I had been feeling that it would be too difficult to make a change at this “advanced” stage of my life. Boy, did my limited belief system get expanded that afternoon

We continued to do service projects around town for several more weeks, including completely painting someone’s home and setting up a large 11)bleacher for a horseback riding academy for physically challenged children. We had a lot of fun and did a lot of good. we ended up with the nickname The Arc Angels. In addition to the good feelings that came from helping out others, the good feelings we shared as employees of a company that cared for both its employees and the community went a long way toward creating a work atmosphere that was a joy to be part of.

(Source: wwenglish.com)