Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Classical_Chinese_lexicon> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 79 of
79
with 100 triples per page.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon abstract "Classical Chinese lexicon is the lexicon of Classical Chinese, a language register marked by a vocabulary that greatly differs from the lexicon of modern vernacular Chinese.In terms of conciseness and compactness, Classical Chinese rarely uses words composed of two Chinese characters; nearly all words are of one syllable only. This stands directly in contrast with modern Chinese dialects, in which two-syllable words are extremely common. This phenomenon exists, in part, because polysyllabic words evolved in Chinese to disambiguate homophones that result from sound changes. This is similar to such phenomena in English as the pen–pin merger of many dialects in the American south: because the words "pin" and "pen" sound alike in such dialects of English, a certain degree of confusion can occur unless one adds qualifiers like "ink pen" and "stick pin." Similarly, Chinese has acquired many polysyllabic words in order to disambiguate monosyllabic words that sounded different in earlier forms of Chinese but identical in one region or another during later periods. Because Classical Chinese is based on the literary examples of ancient Chinese literature, it has almost none of the two-syllable words present in modern Chinese varieties.Classical Chinese has more pronouns compared to the modern vernacular. In particular, whereas Mandarin has one general character to refer to the first-person pronoun ("I"/"me"), Literary Chinese has several, many of which are used as part of honorific language (see Chinese honorifics), and several of which have different grammatical uses (first-person collective, first-person possessive, etc.).In syntax, Classical Chinese is always ready to drop subjects, verbs, objects, etc. when their meaning is understood (pragmatically inferable). Also, words are not restrictively categorized into parts of speech: nouns used as verbs, adjectives used as nouns, and so on. There is no copula in Classical Chinese, "是" (pinyin: shì) is a copula in modern Chinese but in old Chinese it was originally a near demonstrative ("this"); the modern Chinese for "this" is "這" (pinyin: zhè).Beyond grammar and vocabulary differences, Classical Chinese can be distinguished by literary and cultural differences: an effort to maintain parallelism and rhythm, even in prose works, and extensive use of literary and cultural allusions, thereby also contributing to brevity.The Muslim Hui people developed Jingtang Jiaoyu for representing Arabic sounds with Chinese characters. Classical Chinese has had influence of Jingtang Jiaoyu. Rather than using Standard Chinese grammar, they use the grammar of their dialect and Classical Chinese to read the Arabic sounds out loud. The Classical Chinese word order is often the reverse of Mandarin; for example, Mandarin 饒恕 (pinyin: ráoshù, "forgive") is Classical 恕饒 (pinyin: shùráo).Many final particles (Chinese: 歇語字; pinyin: xiēyǔzì; Wade–Giles: hsieh1-yü3-tzu4) and interrogative particles are found in Literary Chinese.".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=64EPAAAAYAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=VrgPAAAAYAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=_yUtAAAAMAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=aemBAAAAIAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=b2JkAAAAMAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=kGFkAAAAMAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=lJ4tAAAAMAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=wyaFAAAAIAAJ.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink books?id=xzZGUjlk4tsC.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageExternalLink classical_chinese.php.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageID "39624964".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageLength "19475".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageRevisionID "683452131".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Analects.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_grammar.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_adjectives.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_grammar.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_honorifics.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_particles.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_pronouns.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_verbs.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Chinese.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Chinese_grammar.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Confucius.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Conjunction_(grammar).
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Contrast_(linguistics).
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Copula_(linguistics).
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Demonstrative.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_conjunction.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Honorific.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Hui_people.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_typographic_symbols.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Jingtang_Jiaoyu.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Laozi.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Lexicon.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Parallelism_(grammar).
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Part_of_speech.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Parts_of_speech.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Phonological_history_of_English_high_front_vowels.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Pin–pen_merger.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Pro-drop_language.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Pronoun.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Pu_Songling.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Quotation_mark.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Register_(sociolinguistics).
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Sun_Tzu.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Sun_Zi.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Syllable.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Syntax.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink The_Art_of_War.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Tianxia.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Varieties_of_Chinese.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Vernacular_Chinese.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink W:zh:聊齋志異.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink 第02卷.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLink Written_vernacular_Chinese.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageWikiLinkText "Classical Chinese lexicon".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon hasPhotoCollection Classical_Chinese_lexicon.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon p "xiēyǔzì".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon t "歇語字".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon w "hsieh1-yü3-tzu4".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clarify.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wikibooks.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon subject Category:Chinese_grammar.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon hypernym Lexicon.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon type Work.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon comment "Classical Chinese lexicon is the lexicon of Classical Chinese, a language register marked by a vocabulary that greatly differs from the lexicon of modern vernacular Chinese.In terms of conciseness and compactness, Classical Chinese rarely uses words composed of two Chinese characters; nearly all words are of one syllable only. This stands directly in contrast with modern Chinese dialects, in which two-syllable words are extremely common.".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon label "Classical Chinese lexicon".
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon sameAs m.0vzrmvr.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon sameAs Q16241545.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon sameAs Q16241545.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon wasDerivedFrom Classical_Chinese_lexicon?oldid=683452131.
- Classical_Chinese_lexicon isPrimaryTopicOf Classical_Chinese_lexicon.