Can Native Japanese Girls Actually Write Japanese kanji?
#1

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#2

Moral of the story is when you can read and write basic 汉字, you can get around in Japan.

Big Grin

You've got friendly neighbours? Grow Up! 李光耀 2013
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#3

Does South Korea regret losing Chinese characters?

There are many countries that want to throw away Chinese characters. China, Japan, and South Korea all have similar trends of thought, but both China and Japan have stopped the trend of thinking of removing Chinese characters, especially us, and we are heading towards a completely different path from the overall Westernization - culture confidence.
So, as the only country in the Three Kingdoms that lost Chinese characters, does South Korea regret it?
Of course not, how can Koreans slap themselves in the face? Even if they encounter all kinds of difficulties, Koreans can only smash their teeth and swallow them.
In the past few years, there has even been a phenomenon in which Korean university exams are presented in English, because English is more accurate, otherwise it will affect the test results.
This is still a small problem, in fact even the Koreans themselves realize that they have a cultural gap.
Chosun Ilbo once published an editorial that the vast sea of Korean ancient books is becoming a "book from the sky", and not many Koreans can understand it. The policy of abolishing Chinese characters is putting Korean history and culture in crisis.
In recent years, a funny scene has appeared in Korean variety shows-several artists visited Korean cultural relics and guessed the origin of the cultural relics for a long time. But the Chinese artists (trainees in Korea) on the side easily understood the Chinese on the cultural relics, and in turn told Koreans the origin of the cultural relics.
[Image: 31e4c57d2a584809857348cb883e74d0.jpg]
Regarding the abolition of Chinese characters, Japanese scholars said that they realized that "abolishing a character is not just abolishing a character, but also abandoning the culture that this character carries, and throwing away a series of jewels behind this character."
The people who said this were Kagaya Pedestrian and Shifang Tian Inuhiko, and the second half of the sentence "It turns out that we are doing the right thing, Chinese culture is a rich treasure, if it is rejected because of the inexplicable patriotic paranoia of some of us. Outside the door, what a loss! The Koreans regret it now, but it's too late."
The two scholars spoke with pride. I think the proud attitude of the two of them seems to be worth thinking about.
Around 2013, with the Korean government's promotion of traditional culture, a phenomenon of "Chinese fever" appeared in South Korea. In HowNet's paper, there is an interesting article called "Contemporary Korean Calligraphy and the Dilemma It Faces".
The article said that the official decision of "special use for Korean characters" has invisibly brought a fatal blow to the development of Chinese calligraphy based on Chinese characters, which has led to the fact that both Chinese calligraphy and Korean calligraphy in Korea are now in the midst of a crisis. A difficult situation.
With the development of time, whether to completely remove Chinese characters or to mix Han and Han has become a famous issue of the times in Korea.
In May 2016, the Constitutional Court of South Korea held a public debate between the two factions. Many former prime ministers of South Korea have jointly proposed to the Blue House the "Proposal to Urge the Implementation of Chinese Character Education in the Process of Primary Education".
What is the future of South Korea? China and Japan are waiting to see the joke.
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#4

Cannot abolish lah, if abolishing, a lot of ancient transcripts written in Hanji, they will not understand lah. Rotfl

It is not about the hanji, it is about the culture. It will lose if abandoning the hanji.

Korea also faces the similar problem.
But the worst part now is the korean characters are not enough to use.(不够用)Dont laugh!

Koreans also don’t learn Hanji to make the matter worse.

五千年中华文化,不是盖的。

“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind"
[+] 1 user Likes RiseofAsia's post
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#5

[Image: 20210706-210143.jpg]

Hanzi very beautiful art, why throw it away?
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#6

(16-06-2023, 05:50 PM)RiseofAsia Wrote:  Cannot abolish lah, if abolishing, a lot of ancient transcripts written in Hanji, they will not understand lah. Rotfl

It is not about the hanji, it is about the culture. It will lose if abandoning the hanji.

Korea also faces the similar problem.
But the worst part now is the korean characters are not enough to use.(不够用)Dont laugh!

Koreans also don’t learn Hanji to make the matter worse.

五千年中华文化,不是盖的。

Both Koreans and Japanese have problems to differentiate words with same pronunciations, using Kanji or Hanja really helps to tell them apart.
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#7

From the video you can see how poor Japanese youngsters in writing Kanji although they have no problem reading them.
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#8

(16-06-2023, 05:50 PM)RiseofAsia Wrote:  Cannot abolish lah, if abolishing, a lot of ancient transcripts written in Hanji, they will not understand lah. Rotfl

It is not about the hanji, it is about the culture. It will lose if abandoning the hanji.

Korea also faces the similar problem.
But the worst part now is the korean characters are not enough to use.(不够用)Dont laugh!

Koreans also don’t learn Hanji to make the matter worse.

五千年中华文化,不是盖的。


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#9

Ok, ok, ok ... 这么烂的阴语都好意思拿来下衰?
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#10

(16-06-2023, 04:16 PM)lvlrsSTI Wrote:  

so ugly
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