Zhongwen (Chinese)

Chinese

Chinese is spoken by about 1.3 billion people mainly in the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China (a.k.a. Taiwan), Singapore and other parts of Southeast Asia. There are also communities of Chinese speakers in many other parts of the world.

Languages of dialects? | Spoken Chinese | Written Chinese |

Languages or dialects?

The different varieties of Chinese are known as 方言 (fāngyán), which is translated as 'regional languages', 'toplects', 'dialects' or 'varieties'. The English term dialect normally refers to more or less mutually intelligible varieties of a single language, though the distinction between dialects and languages is often for sociological and political reasons rather than linguistics ones. Chinese people generally refer to Chinese as a single language with a number of different dialects or varieties. As there is little mutual intelligiblity between the different varieties of Chinese and as a result, some non-Chinese linguists refer to them as separate languages.

A distinction is made in Chinese between spoken and written language. In China the written form of Chinese, which is perceived as being uniform throughout the country is referred to as 中文 (zhōngwén), while the terms 语 [語] (yǔ) or 话 [話] (huà) are used in the names of spoken varities of Chinese, e.g. Mandarin Chinese is known as 汉語 [漢語] (hànyǔ) = "Han language", or 普通话 [普通話] (pǔtōnghuà) = "common language" in China, and elsewhere it is refered to as 國語 [国语] (guóyǔ) = "national language" or 華語 [华语] (huáyǔ) = "Chinese language". The word 汉 [漢] (hàn) is used to refer to the Chinese people and comes from the Han Dynasty (206 BC - 220 AD).

Spoken Chinese

Chinese belongs to the Sinitic or Chinese branch of Sino-Tibetan language family. The modern varieties of Chinese all descended from Middle Chinese (中古漢語 [中古汉语]), which was spoken in China between about the spoken during Southern and Northern Dynasties and the Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties (c. 5th - 12th centuries AD), and which developed from Old Chinese (上古漢語 [上古汉语]), which was spoken during the Shang and Zhou Dynasties and the Warring States Period (c. 1600-256 BC).

Varieties of spoken Chinese are traditional grouped into the following major groups:

Written Chinese (中文)

The main written form of Chinese is based mainly on the Mandarin spoken by educated people in Beijing.

Omniglot Chinese
Omniglot Chinese
learn to read, write and pronounce Chinese characters

Available for
Android & iPhone

Chinese is written with characters (漢字 [汉字] hànzì) which represent both sound and meaning. Words in Chinese can be made up of one of more syllables and each syllable is represented by a single character. There are relatively few different types of syllable in spoken Chinese - about 1,700 in Mandairn, compared to languages like English with over 8,000 - yet there are tens of thousands of characters. As a result there are multiple characters for each syllable, each of which has a different meaning. This type of writing system is known as semanto-phonetic, logophonetic, morphophonemic, logographic or logosyllabic.

More information about Written Chinese

books Recommended books

Books about Chinese characters and calligraphy
Language learning materials for: Classical Chinese, Mandarin, Shanghainese, Hokkien, Taiwanese and Cantonese

Learn Mandarin Chinese abroad

Chinese Translation
中文翻譯
of names and phrases

Semanto-phonetic writing systems

Ancient Egyptian, Chinese, Chữ-nôm, Japanese, Jurchen, Khitan, Linear B, Mayan, Naxi, Tangut (Hsihsia)

Learn to speak Mandarin Chinese confidently and naturally with Rocket Chinese

Omniglot Chinese - learn to read and write the hundred most commonly-used characters. Available for Android & iPhone

Learn Chinese online with Beijing's best teachers

If you want to achieve a+ certification but afraid of failure then give a try to 1y0-a17 questions and 640-816 practice tests and get 100% sure success on first attempt.

Our English speaking consultants are ready to help you find the perfect office space in China. We cover all major Chinese cities. Call for a no obligation quote.

Learn Chinese Characters with the Omniglot Chinese app