Lesson 3 : How To write Chinese Characters

Chinese Character Tutorial If you're interested in reading and writing Chinese characters, there's no better place to get started...

Chinese Character Tutorial
If you're interested in reading and writing Chinese characters, there's no better place to get started than with the numbers 1-10. They are quite simple to write, useful to know, and are exactly the same in both the traditional and simplified writing systems.
So grab a piece of paper and a pencil, give a click on the links below, and try to write the characters with proper stroke order as demonstrated:
OneTwoThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightNineTen
Now that you know these characters, you actually know how to read and write all the numbers through 100. That's because Chinese follows a very simple pattern for counting:
11=10 + 1=十一
12=10 + 2=十二
20=2 + 10=二十
21=2 + 10 + 1=二十一
28=2 + 10 + 8=二十八
82=8 + 10 + 2=八十二
99=9 + 10 + 9=九十九
Ready for a challenge? Let's try something a little more interesting:
English:LoveBeautyCourageDragonFire
Simplified:
Traditional:samesame
Because the Chinese simplified system is based on the traditional one, many characters are exactly the same in both systems, as we saw with the the numbers 1-10. Even for characters that aren't the same, you will often be able to see similarities. For example, have a look at the character for "love" in the simplifiedand traditional systems. Almost the same, right?
To get a bit more practical, here are the 25 most frequently used characters in the Chinese language:
Source: http://technology.chtsai.org/charfreq/
 (a
possessive
particle)
is,
are,
yes
not,
no
I,
me,
my
onehave,
has
biglocated,
at
person,
people
past
tense
particle
middleuntil,
arrive
Simp
Tradsamesamesamesamesamesamesamesamesamesamesamesame
 money,
supply
to
want,
need
cancanthis(common
measure
word)
youwill,
meet
gooddo
something
for
someone
up,
above,
get on
to
come
Simp
Tradsamesamesamesamesamesamesame

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