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- Q10788708 subject Q6369308.
- Q10788708 subject Q7213518.
- Q10788708 subject Q7237538.
- Q10788708 subject Q8363609.
- Q10788708 subject Q8601447.
- Q10788708 subject Q8898272.
- Q10788708 abstract "Until the beginning of the 20th century, government and scholarly documents in Vietnam were written in classical Chinese (called chữ nho "Confucian script," or chữ Hán "Chinese script"), using Chinese characters with Vietnamese approximation of Middle Chinese pronunciations.At the same time popular novels and poetry in Vietnamese were written in the chữ nôm script, which used Chinese characters for Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary and an adapted set of characters for the native vocabulary.The two scripts coexisted until the era of French Indochina when the Latin alphabet quốc ngữ script gradually became the written medium of both government and popular literature.".
- Q10788708 thumbnail Logographic_Vietnamese_Terminology.svg?width=300.
- Q10788708 wikiPageExternalLink thieuchuu.
- Q10788708 wikiPageExternalLink hanviet.htm.
- Q10788708 wikiPageExternalLink hantu_index.html.
- Q10788708 wikiPageExternalLink www.hanviet.org.
- Q10788708 wikiPageWikiLink Q10788708.
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- Q10788708 comment "Until the beginning of the 20th century, government and scholarly documents in Vietnam were written in classical Chinese (called chữ nho "Confucian script," or chữ Hán "Chinese script"), using Chinese characters with Vietnamese approximation of Middle Chinese pronunciations.At the same time popular novels and poetry in Vietnamese were written in the chữ nôm script, which used Chinese characters for Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary and an adapted set of characters for the native vocabulary.The two scripts coexisted until the era of French Indochina when the Latin alphabet quốc ngữ script gradually became the written medium of both government and popular literature.".
- Q10788708 label "History of writing in Vietnam".
- Q10788708 depiction Logographic_Vietnamese_Terminology.svg.