The
Han people have their own spoken and written languages.
Chinese belongs to the Han-Tibetan language family.
It is the most commonly used language in China, and
one of the most commonly used languages in the world.
Written Chinese emerged in its embryonic form of carved
symbols approximately 6,000 years ago. The Chinese characters
used today evolved from those used in bone and tortoise
shell inscriptions more than 3,000 years ago and the
bronze inscriptions produced soon after. Drawn figures
were gradually reduced to patterned strokes, pictographs
were reduced to symbols, and the complicated graphs
became simpler. Pictophonetic characters joined early
pictographs and ideographs. In fact, there are six categories
of Chinese characters: pictographs, self-explanatory
characters, associative compounds, pictophonetic characters,
phonetic loan characters, and mutually explanatory characters.
Chinese words are monosyllabic. A large proportion of
Chinese characters are composed of an ideogramatic element
combined with a phonetic element. Many non-Chinese sometimes
get the feeling that there are an unlimited number of
Chinese characters. How many Chinese characters are
there exactly? The Qing Dynasty Kang Xi Dictionary,
completed in 1716, contains more than 47,000 characters.
The eight-volume Hanyu Da Cidian (Chinese Lexicon) published
in 1986-1990 contains over 56,000 characters. However,
only about 3,000 characters are in common use. In addition
to their functional value as symbols for records and
communications, Chinese characters have an aesthetic
value as calligraphy.
All China’s 55 minority peoples have their own languages
except the Hui and Manchu, who use Chinese; 21 of these
have a written form, using 27 kinds of languages. Five
language families are represented in China: 29, including
Zhuang, Dai, Tibetan, Yi, Miao and Yao, are within the
Han-Tibetan language family; 17, including Uygur, Kazak,
Mongolian and Korean, are within the Altaic language
family; three, the Va, Deang and Blang, are within the
South Asian language family; Tajik and Russian belong
to the Indo-European language family; and Gaoshan is
an Austronesian language.
The Jing language has yet to be classified typologically.
Nowadays, classes in schools in predominantly national
minority areas are taught in the local language, using
local language textbooks.
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