How to Learn Chinese Mandarin
When
talking about Chinese language studies we need to be specific. There are around
fifty languages that are alive and thriving in China today. The two biggest are
Cantonese and Mandarin. Cantonese is mostly confined to the area around Hong
Kong and Taiwan while Mandarin is the de facto lingua franca of contemporary
China. This has not always been the case and it did not come about as an
accident. Mandarin is also known as Standard Mandarin and is an amalgamation of
the Beijing accent and simplified traditional Chinese. It is known as Standard
Mandarin because it has been artificially promoted by the central government as
a standardized mode of communication for all of China. The result of this
effort is that today there really is a language that can claim the title of
being called Chinese. Standard Mandarin, as opposed to the 50 other versions of
the Chinese language family is a key to being understood in the vast majority
of the huge country that is China.
There
are many methods available today for learning Mandarin. Few, however, works as
well as personalized content does. When I say personalized content I mean a
curriculum that is designed for you own needs. Grammar, pronunciation and
writing are taught by a common red thread of relevance pertaining to your own
ambitions. So for example, if you are learning Mandarin to study Chinese
traditional medicine you need a huge subset of words that most people will
never need. These words can therefore never be part of a general curriculum but
for you they represent the most important part of the language.
The
nature of personalized content is that it helps you learn a language
organically. Your skills in the more general uses of the language are honed by
focusing on your own target. When you are able to speak Mandarin in the sense
of traditional Chinese medicine you can practice not only the words that you
only use to describe this practice, but also the parts of the Mandarin language
that holds the complete sentences together. This method works best because you
therefore are not only surgically targeting your own mission; you are also
actually learning the peripheral content surrounding your bulls' eye at a
faster rate than you would if you target these basics.
To
clarify that statement I would like to make simple analogy. I am big fan of
diving and swimming in general. When I train for swimming races I spend only
about one third of my time in water. By building muscles in the gym I am able
to increase my power at a much faster rate than by only swimming. Targeting
your own strength, where you need it most, is what will get you speaking
Mandarin the fastest as you will then have the muscle to engage complicated
sentence structures in a setting that matter to you.
Instead
of learning how to ask what your friends' grandfathers are called, which is to
be honest, not something most people do on a daily basis, but is something that
every general language book loves to teach, you learn something that you will
use every day. If you do, you will then, in these settings, pick up the
surrounding language components required to ask these simple and rather silly
questions to.
So
people that want to learn Mandarin should find a way to study where they get
the personal attention required to succeed quickly. There are two main ways to
achieve this. The first option is a private tutor, which of course is 100
percent targeted. It can however be too expensive for some people. The second
option is to not study at a university and instead pay for a private language
school. This is more expensive than studying at university, but it is cheaper
than private classes and largely gets you the desired results: targeted,
relevant and efficient Mandarin language studies.
If
you are looking for more information Study
Chinese Mandarin & Study
Chinese Content www.thinkfirstdubai.com
Article Source: https://medium.com/@thinkfirstuae/how-to-learn-chinese-mandarin-3aa14a95e416
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