is itself a radical. It is a picture of a mountain range, where the middle line represents the highest peak. 山 can itself serve as a phonetic in some rather rare characters such as 疝 shàn as in 疝气 (疝氣) shànqì “hernia.”
Reading Exercises (Simplified and Traditional Characters)
Now practice reading the new characters and words for this lesson in context. Be sure to refer to the Notes at the end of this lesson, and make use of the accompanying audio disc to hear and practice correct pronunciation, phrasing, and intonation.
A. PERSONAL NAMES
Read out loud the following Chinese personal names, each of which consists of a surname followed by a one- or two-syllable given name.
一、王大山
二、林京
三、王明山
四、林明明
五、王林
六、王明大
七、林台山
八、王明
九、王山明
十、林大明
B. PLACE NAMES
Read out loud each of the following place names.
一、台山
二、北京
三、台北
C. CHARACTER DIFFERENTIATION DRILLS
Distinguish carefully the following similar-looking characters, pronouncing each one out loud and thinking of its meaning.
一、六 六 六 大 大 大
二、大 大 大 六 六 六
Notes
A4. Reduplicated names like 明明 can be pronounced either with full tones on each syllable (Míngmíng), or with a neutral tone on the second syllable (Míngming), which is how the speaker in the audio recording pronounces it here.
A5. Some characters can occur both as surnames and in given names. For example, the character 林 is a common surname but can also occur in a one or two-syllable given name.
Kiosk in Hong Kong selling telephone calling cards and other items
PART 4
More Common Personal Names and Place Names
New Characters and Words
Study the six characters below and the common words written with them, paying careful attention to each character’s pronunciation, meaning, and structure, as well as similar-looking characters. After you’ve studied a character, turn to the Practice Book volume and practice writing it on the practice sheet, making sure to follow the correct stroke order and direction as you pronounce it out loud and think of its meaning.
19 | 何 | hé | who, what, how |
Radical is 人 rén “person,” which is written 亻 when occurring at the left side of a character so as not to get in the way of the component at the right. The colloquial name for this radical is 人字旁 rénzìpáng “side made up of the character 人.” The phonetic in 何 is 可 kĕ “may” [BF]. | |||
何 | Hé | He, Ho [SN] | |
20 | 李 | lĭ | plum |
Radical is 木 mù “tree” [BF]. The other component is 子 zĭ “son” [BF]. The “plum” is the “son” (or fruit) of the plum “tree.” | |||
李 | Lĭ | Li, Lee (also Lee, Rhee, or Yi, the second-most-common Korean surname) [SN] | |
21 | 文 | wén | writing, literature |
文 is itself a radical. 文 also serves as a phonetic, e.g., 蚊 wén as in 蚊子 wénzi “mosquito” and 纹 (紋) wén as in 指纹 (指紋) zhĭwén “fingerprint.” Be sure to contrast 文 and 六 liù (7). | |||
文 | Wén | Wen [SN] | |
22 | 生 | shēng | be born, give birth to |
生 is itself a radical. 生 also serves as a phonetic, e.g., 星 xīng as in 星期 xīngqī “week” and 甥 shēng as in 外甥 wàishēng “sister’s son” or “nephew.” The character 生 is made up of 土 tŭ “soil” and 屮 (an ancient character for “grass”). The etymology is: “Grass” is “given birth to” in the “soil.” Be careful to contrast 生 and 王 wáng (6). | |||
生 | shēng | be born, give birth to [V] | |
23 | 中 | zhōng | middle, among |
Radical is 丨 kŭn “vertical line.” The whole character
|