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On November 02 2009 08:00 McFly wrote:Show nested quote +On November 02 2009 07:57 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 07:56 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: You do realize that if you know simplified, you can read traditional, bit not viceversa. other way around dude... for example how the hell are you supposed to guess than 开 is 開? You do realize you said this to a Chinese person? And your example is just proving our point.
im taiwanese, so yeah.....? it shows that few would think that simplified character 开is the traditional 開, ie, that simplified to traditional is hard, so i fail to see how that proves your point (which was simplified -> traditional = 1a2a3aezpz).
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On November 02 2009 08:00 McFly wrote:Show nested quote +On November 02 2009 07:57 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 07:56 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: You do realize that if you know simplified, you can read traditional, bit not viceversa. other way around dude... for example how the hell are you supposed to guess than 开 is 開? You do realize you said this to a Chinese person? And your example is just proving our point.
it proves the point both ways for me... and you do realize that most of the ppl in here are prbly chinese as well right? in fact i've long suspected that more than half of TL is asian
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Learn both, focus on simplified. When you think about the vocabulary needed to effectively use Chinese, it's not a lot to learn both.
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Baa?21242 Posts
On November 02 2009 08:03 rauk wrote:Show nested quote +On November 02 2009 08:00 McFly wrote:On November 02 2009 07:57 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 07:56 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: You do realize that if you know simplified, you can read traditional, bit not viceversa. other way around dude... for example how the hell are you supposed to guess than 开 is 開? You do realize you said this to a Chinese person? And your example is just proving our point. im taiwanese, so yeah.....? it shows that few would think that simplified character 开is the traditional 開, ie, that simplified to traditional is hard, so i fail to see how that proves your point (which was simplified -> traditional = 1a2a3aezpz).
Uh, it makes perfect sense to me, since ou can see the 开 in the traditional.
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On November 02 2009 08:05 Carnivorous Sheep wrote:Show nested quote +On November 02 2009 08:03 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 08:00 McFly wrote:On November 02 2009 07:57 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 07:56 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: You do realize that if you know simplified, you can read traditional, bit not viceversa. other way around dude... for example how the hell are you supposed to guess than 开 is 開? You do realize you said this to a Chinese person? And your example is just proving our point. im taiwanese, so yeah.....? it shows that few would think that simplified character 开is the traditional 開, ie, that simplified to traditional is hard, so i fail to see how that proves your point (which was simplified -> traditional = 1a2a3aezpz). Uh, it makes perfect sense to me, since ou can see the 开 in the traditional. simplified to traditional is really easy imo...
csheep is right
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makes perfect sense to me too, since you can see you guys just removed the the 門 part. like i said in an earlier edit, it's pretty probable that it doesn't really matter which you learn first as long as you know them both.
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On November 02 2009 08:03 rauk wrote:Show nested quote +On November 02 2009 08:00 McFly wrote:On November 02 2009 07:57 rauk wrote:On November 02 2009 07:56 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: You do realize that if you know simplified, you can read traditional, bit not viceversa. other way around dude... for example how the hell are you supposed to guess than 开 is 開? You do realize you said this to a Chinese person? And your example is just proving our point. im taiwanese, so yeah.....? it shows that few would think that simplified character 开is the traditional 開, ie, that simplified to traditional is hard, so i fail to see how that proves your point (which was simplified -> traditional = 1a2a3aezpz).
What? Are you saying since your Taiwanese and were taught traditional, so you can not see that 开 = 開? And I'm not saying anything about writing cause it would be hard for either to figure out how to right a traditional character to simplified and viceversa.
EDIT: Sorry, this is getting off topic lol, Im going to stop .
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why are we even arguing this, seriously guys, we are just basically copy-pasting that wikipedia article except the wikipedia article is providing more coherent and in-depth arguments and examples. read it people, 17 different subtopics on the debate with both pro-simplified and pro-traditional stances provided, with excellent examples filling the entire article. i know i'm sounding like a wikifreakia but srsly read it or at least glance through it before posting...
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Baa?21242 Posts
Though I'm usually a proponent of Wikipedia, this particular one is awful. Take a look at one of the Pro-Traditional points:
The high ratio achieved by Simplified characters are by force. Red guards ransacked homes, persecuting teachers and took part in other violent activities.[44] One example is the faculties at Nankai University who were beaten and publicly reviled. Some were murdered. Many faculty families were left homeless.[45] In 1966 universities were even shut down to allow students to participate in the Cultural revolution. Traditional literature were also halted.[46] In just one month between November 9 and December 7, 1966 Red guard member Tan Hou-lan (譚厚蘭) burned 2,700 traditional books.[47]
What does that have to do with anything lol?
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On November 02 2009 08:12 Carnivorous Sheep wrote:Though I'm usually a proponent of Wikipedia, this particular one is awful. Take a look at one of the Pro-Traditional points: Show nested quote +The high ratio achieved by Simplified characters are by force. Red guards ransacked homes, persecuting teachers and took part in other violent activities.[44] One example is the faculties at Nankai University who were beaten and publicly reviled. Some were murdered. Many faculty families were left homeless.[45] In 1966 universities were even shut down to allow students to participate in the Cultural revolution. Traditional literature were also halted.[46] In just one month between November 9 and December 7, 1966 Red guard member Tan Hou-lan (譚厚蘭) burned 2,700 traditional books.[47] What does that have to do with anything lol?
well i don't know which subtopic/subcontext this quote comes from, but i'm assuming it's one of the political/social ones and is arguing that traditional should be restored due to the politically-motivated, forceful, and thus unnatural and ungradual, removal and replacement of traditional characters.
but i still agree that the point is still quite awful and needs heavy editing:
The high ratio achieved by Simplified characters are by force. Red guards persecuted teachers and took part in other violent activities in opposition to traditional characters.[44] One example is the faculties at Nankai University who were beaten, killed and publicly reviled. In 1966 universities were even shut down to allow students to participate in the Cultural revolution. Traditional literature were also halted.[46] Example: between November 9 and December 7, 1966 Red guard member Tan Hou-lan (譚厚蘭) burned 2,700 traditional books.[47]
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Baa?21242 Posts
No, what it is is shifting the focus of the article (if it even had one to begin with) into a political debate about communism.
This guy in the discussion puts it very well:
This has to be one of the most stupid and pointless article on Wiki. The whole thing is filled with stuff like "he said", "she said", manufactured facts, brain-dead logic, politically motivated statements, while putting little effort into establishing facts. Does "...claim that the PRC government was politically motivated to simplify this character, to devalue..." sound NPOV to anyone, at all?
Then there's the whole section about literacy, while showing zero proof that writing system is even related to literacy rate at all (Niger and France have the same official language, so they should have the same literacy rate, right?) This whole section doesn't deserve to exist, whichever side you might "pro".
Next comes the "dry goods" vs "fuck goods" debacle, cited as evidence that merging multiple characters into one confuses people--so, it would have been OK if someone had translated the traditional "幹" (do, perform) into "fuck" on product packaging? It only shows how bad the translator is at English, but not how simplified characters are misleading. Being one of the working languages of UN, and used by more than a billion people daily, I'd wager simplified Chinese can make a distinction between "dry" and "fuck", thank you.
And there's the gem in section "Symbolism conflict". Under "Pro-simplified", bullet 1: "...traditional characters can often be identified as not belonging to China..."; bullet 2: "...simplified characters is far from belonging to mainland China only"; bullet 3: "It's no longer the case that everything in simplified Chinese is made in mainland China...". I can't tell which side of the debate these bullets are "pro-"ing, hell, they don't even agree with each other.
Similar problem in section "Ratio of current usage or pragmatism of the choice between the two systems" (way to make a section title, BTW), under "Pro-simplified", bullet 1: "traditional Chinese ... used by only some 50 million people"; bullet 2: "...used by just over 30 million people". What's more, the "50" and "30" are nicely italicized in case readers might miss the glaring inconsistency. Right after that, under "Pro-traditional", there's the story of Red Guards beating up or murdering people, burning books, etc. Ok, Red Guards bad, I get it. But does it prove the point "The high ratio achieved by Simplified characters are by force"? I don't see it. Relying on ambiguous terms like "Traditional literature" or "traditional books" doesn't do the trick, sorry.
There's a NPOV notice at the top of the page, but it'd be more fitting if it were a "The non-stupidity of this article is disputed" tag, because throughout the whole article, regardless of which side is being "pro-"ed, arguments are either bogus, or badly presented. It's not a neutrality issue, it's a competency issue. We'd be doing readers a service by deleting this article altogether, because it'd be one fewer way to waste readers' time.
And also
The majority of the contents here are old. You can ask anyone on the street and they can get you way better contents except there is no references. If you can find a less-stupid article out there, let us know.
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On November 02 2009 08:18 Carnivorous Sheep wrote:No, what it is is shifting the focus of the article (if it even had one to begin with) into a political debate about communism. This guy in the discussion puts it very well: Show nested quote +This has to be one of the most stupid and pointless article on Wiki. The whole thing is filled with stuff like "he said", "she said", manufactured facts, brain-dead logic, politically motivated statements, while putting little effort into establishing facts. Does "...claim that the PRC government was politically motivated to simplify this character, to devalue..." sound NPOV to anyone, at all?
Then there's the whole section about literacy, while showing zero proof that writing system is even related to literacy rate at all (Niger and France have the same official language, so they should have the same literacy rate, right?) This whole section doesn't deserve to exist, whichever side you might "pro".
Next comes the "dry goods" vs "fuck goods" debacle, cited as evidence that merging multiple characters into one confuses people--so, it would have been OK if someone had translated the traditional "幹" (do, perform) into "fuck" on product packaging? It only shows how bad the translator is at English, but not how simplified characters are misleading. Being one of the working languages of UN, and used by more than a billion people daily, I'd wager simplified Chinese can make a distinction between "dry" and "fuck", thank you.
And there's the gem in section "Symbolism conflict". Under "Pro-simplified", bullet 1: "...traditional characters can often be identified as not belonging to China..."; bullet 2: "...simplified characters is far from belonging to mainland China only"; bullet 3: "It's no longer the case that everything in simplified Chinese is made in mainland China...". I can't tell which side of the debate these bullets are "pro-"ing, hell, they don't even agree with each other.
Similar problem in section "Ratio of current usage or pragmatism of the choice between the two systems" (way to make a section title, BTW), under "Pro-simplified", bullet 1: "traditional Chinese ... used by only some 50 million people"; bullet 2: "...used by just over 30 million people". What's more, the "50" and "30" are nicely italicized in case readers might miss the glaring inconsistency. Right after that, under "Pro-traditional", there's the story of Red Guards beating up or murdering people, burning books, etc. Ok, Red Guards bad, I get it. But does it prove the point "The high ratio achieved by Simplified characters are by force"? I don't see it. Relying on ambiguous terms like "Traditional literature" or "traditional books" doesn't do the trick, sorry.
There's a NPOV notice at the top of the page, but it'd be more fitting if it were a "The non-stupidity of this article is disputed" tag, because throughout the whole article, regardless of which side is being "pro-"ed, arguments are either bogus, or badly presented. It's not a neutrality issue, it's a competency issue. We'd be doing readers a service by deleting this article altogether, because it'd be one fewer way to waste readers' time. And also Show nested quote +The majority of the contents here are old. You can ask anyone on the street and they can get you way better contents except there is no references. If you can find a less-stupid article out there, let us know.
yeah ok i get it this wikipedia article is relatively 'less-competent' than other articles, but still, to go back to my point, do you think we're doing a better job/going to do a better job of providing a traditional vs. simplified deabte than this wikipedia article is? i'm trying to build progress from progress here and not repeat progress previously existent.
if you want to contribute more than this article i've provided then please do so; i'm more eager to read something better than this article on this topic than probably anyone else in this thread.
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Baa?21242 Posts
Yes, we are. Read the second quote - asking someone on the street, or in our case, a random internet thread - seems to be yielding more coherent statements than this particular article. At least we are providing relevant details as opposed to attacks on a political system/self-contradictory "facts"/just plain retarded shit.
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On November 02 2009 08:27 Carnivorous Sheep wrote: Yes, we are. Read the second quote - asking someone on the street, or in our case, a random internet thread - seems to be yielding more coherent statements than this particular article. At least we are providing relevant details as opposed to attacks on a political system/self-contradictory "facts"/just plain retarded shit.
relevant details and coherent statements? wheres the references? i'm talking about facts and not opinions from the streets of the internet
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Baa?21242 Posts
The majority of the contents here are old. You can ask anyone on the street and they can get you way better contents except there is no references. If you can find a less-stupid article out there, let us know.
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On November 02 2009 08:31 Carnivorous Sheep wrote:Show nested quote +The majority of the contents here are old. You can ask anyone on the street and they can get you way better contents except there is no references. If you can find a less-stupid article out there, let us know.
yeah thats the entire point of not asking random ppl on the street, no references = no credibility on an anonymous internet forum, no matter how seemingly excellent a piece of content you provide, content can always always be fabricated dude
edit: this article isn't complete and absolute bullshit that should be eradicated from the face of the earth, it provides facts and references and an education on the topic, perfection notwithstanding; it has so far done a better job of providing knowledge to us than this thread. so why not build upon it? slamming down the entire article and influencing others to not read it is not the way to go.
also i find this whole ordeal regarding wikipedia contributors' comments incredibly, incredibly ironic
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get really good at one form. then learning the other will be a cinch.
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No, traditional is pretty much useless unless you go to Hong Kong or Taiwan. But even then, you can get by with just knowning simplified.
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I would say simplified is more commonly used, so if you are trying to learn Chinese to communicate, simplified is better. However, traditional gives a greater sense as to the origin of the characters. If you like stuff about the history of a language, go ahead and learn traditional.
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