Chinese Characters Flashcards Pdf Average ratng: 3,5/5 6679votes

Great effort! I’m going to let my friends who are learning Chinese know about this! Perhaps you’d like to update some characters on the flashcards to be more.

Chinese Words FlashcardsIntegrated Chinese Flashcards

I love visually creative tools for learning Chinese, and these free fit right into that category. “What’s BoPoMoFo?” I can hear you shouting – Well, BoPoMoFo is the phonetic alphabet that is used in Taiwan in lieu of Pinyin and depending upon your choice of where to learn Chinese, or if you’re more interested in Traditional Chinese, it might be a viable alternative to the Pinyin system. Each flashcard has been made by associating a Chinese word and related cartoon with a Zhuyin character from the pronunciation by integrating the Zhuyin right into the picture (that’s 3 levels of association!). The result is a set of flashcards that are visually stimulating and sure to aid in acquisition of the Zhuyin alphabet. Here’s a few cards that I particularly like: The creator of the Flashcards,, has also posted a video on Youtube showing the flashcards, though there currently isn’t any audio on the video, which is unfortunate. Hopefully it’ll be added soon: httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NJ9dPPTo8Q If you’re not sure how to pronounce the Zhuyin characters then you can use an online resource such as this, or you could always download our. And if all that isn’t enough for you then Castle of Costa Mesa also offers the Zhuyin flashcards for download as.

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According to the U.S. Department of State’s Foreign Service Institute, Chinese is a Class III language—the most difficult to master—and requires 2,200 hours of rigorous study to gain general proficiency. Luckily for procrastinators with tickets already booked to Beijing, a new design-focused learning system called can teach students basic literacy in a matter of days., currently in the midst of a Kickstarter campaign, teaches English speakers how to read basic Chinese characters (traditional and simplified) by embedding them in colorful pictures that illustrate their meaning.

The symbol for “person” is anthropomorphized into a picture of a walking man, while the glyph for “door” is illustrated to look like a saloon entrance from a cowboy movie. After mastering eight of these simple characters, called “radicals” in the Chineasy system, learners can combine them to unlock the meaning behind dozens of more complex characters. For instance, putting the character for “person” inside the one for “door” creates the symbol for “escape.” The system is designed to address the major challenge of learning Chinese—the great wall of symbols that need to be deciphered and memorized.