February 10, 2019

Resources for learning Mandarin Chinese

Here is the list of resources I use or have used when learning or maintaining Mandarin Chinese. I tried to list them all so if something is not on this list, it means I didn't use it or used it and didn't like it. When it comes to resources, I try to look for efficiency, i.e. why have 15 pretty good ones if a few very good resources will do the job? :)


Dictionaries:
  1. Dianhua dictionary (for iOS only)
    • https://goo.gl/ZA5sp5
    • An electronic dictionary for offline smartphone usage.
    • Very powerful in conjunction with character handwriting input.
    • Allows you to search characters by pinyin and automatically looks up all characters or words with the pronunciation you are looking for. This is very convenient since frequently you only know the pronunciation and not the characters of the word you are looking for.
  2. Google translate
    • https://translate.google.com/
    • Contrary to what many people say, it is the most powerful dictionary out there if you use it correctly.
    • Good for online copy-paste translations.
    • Offers the feature to scan characters with your phone’s camera.
    • Very advanced speech recognition.
    • Very good for contextual search (expressions and sentences), less preferable for non-contextual search (individual words).
  3. Zhongwen pop-up dictionary plugin for your browser
    • https://goo.gl/e5eRGV
    • Move the cursor over a character on your screen and a translation will pop up.
    • Very useful when reading texts online

December 14, 2018

The most complex Chinese character

What is the most complex Chinese character?

When it comes to the character with the greatest number of strokes and the greatest number of elements I was able to find, it is this character, which is pronounced dhō, with 341 strokes:

http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/File:Chinese_character_extreme.svg

It supposedly means “Impossibly complex pictogram-based writing system that takes a person a thousand thousand years to learn.” This character however should not count in my opinion for a number of reasons. The only reference to it I was able to find was on the Uncyclopedia website, which is a website where you can: “Discover, share and add your best comedic writing!” So dhō is thus very probably just a recently invented character invented for fun, where the author took several very complicated existing and non-existing characters, added them together, added a few non-standard strokes, called the character dhō and gave it the meaning I mentioned earlier.

November 24, 2018

Frequently asked questions

Hello everyone,

by surpassing 35 000 subscribers on Youtube, I thought it would be finally time to make a few long overdue videos which I really hope to do soon, but in the meantime, I decided to give my podcast a little restart as well. I made a podcast recording answering some of the questions asked in the comments recently:

How to maintain several languages.
How to regain motivation after losing fluency in languages once spoken at a B2/C1 level.
Resources you recommend for learning Mandarin from scratch.
What happened to your podcast with 天一?
How old were you when you started learning Chinese?
Is it important to study grammar?
Learning two languages at the same time?

Many thanks to my friend (can't say his name:)) for making the sound in the recording sound professional.


October 06, 2018

Some thoughts on the reliability of 說文解字

Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35309
Disclaimer: This article will be very technical and very probably very uninteresting if you are not
familiar with Chinese character etymology. My apologies in advance. 


I got into a debate with someone online under one of my videos recently. The video was about the 辡 character phonetic series. In the beginning of the video I argued that 辡 was a character formed by two 辛 characters. According to my sources, 辡  means 'litigation' and one of the older meanings of 辛 was 'criminal' and that 辡 'litigation' is a semantic compound character with one 辛 'criminal' and another 辛 'criminal' pointing to its meaning (two criminals litigating in front of a court).

Since 辛  doesn't mean 'criminal' today, someone correctly asked in the comments, what my sources were.

I wrote:

(I am) Inferring (that 辛 had the meaning of criminal) from the following:

《說文》《辡部》辡:辠人相與訟也。从二辛。凡辡之屬皆从辡。

And the existence and ancient interpretation of characters like 宰 辠 and 辜

《說文》《宀部》宰:辠人在屋下執事者。从宀从辛。辛,辠也。
《說文》《辛部》辠:犯法也。从辛从自,言辠人蹙鼻苦辛之憂。秦以辠似皇字,改為罪。
《說文》《辛部》辜:辠也。从辛古聲。

To which the person argued, that the 說文解字 dictionary is not a reliable source and that it regularly misinterprets characters, among other things also because it uses an extremely limited data set and that not a single entry in the entire work makes use of 甲骨文 data (due to it being unavailable).

A debate ensued which went on ad infinitum and produced enough material to be published as a small article:

August 27, 2018

Sun c' Umenie Vojny | Sun Zi Art of War (slovenský preklad)

Sun c’ - Umenie vojny

Preklad: Mgr. Bc. Vladimír Škultéty

Komentár k prekladu

Pred niekoľkými týždňami som čítal knihu Vladár od Niccola Machiavelliho a spomenul som si, že existuje kniha - Umenie vojny, v čínskej literatúre, ktorá má podobný charakter (hoci napísaná skoro 2000 rokov pred Machiavelliho Vladárom). Našiel som jej text v klasickej čínštine, vytlačil ho a keď som si uvedomil, že má po vytlačení iba jedenásť strán, rozhodol som sa, že ho skúsim zanalyzovať trošku podrobnejšie. Vymklo sa to spod kontroly a skončilo to takto:



Následne mi napadlo, že by som túto knihu, ktorá patrí medzi veľmi dôležité kníhy v histórii čínskej literatúry, preložil do slovenčiny.

V súčasnosti pracujem iba ako tlmočník čínskeho a anglického jazyka, v minulosti som ale pracoval niekoľko rokov aj ako prekladateľ a mám bakalársky titul zo sinológie. Bral som tento preklad aj ako osvieženie starých vedomostí klasickej čínštiny, tréning prekladu samotného a ako poznávací zájazd do Starovekej Číny zároveň.

Pri preklade som si pomáhal dvoma anglickými verziami tejto knihy a po jednom preklade do mandarínskej čínštiny, ruštiny a francúzštiny. Tým, že poznám tieto jazyky relatívne dobre, vrátane klasickej čínštiny, v ktorom bol originál napísaný, sa mi, zdá sa, celkom prekvapivo podarilo skombinovaním všetkých správne preložených problematických častí z rôznych prekladov a mojich vlastných (snáď) správnych vylepšení dospieť k textu, ktorý je miestami možno najpresnejším z tých, ktoré som čítal. Keďže som si pri práci s touto knihou pomáhal s vyššie spomenutými prekladmi do cudzích jazykov, často sa stalo, že čo Američan preložil presne, Francúz poplietol alebo naopak a ja som bol ten, kto to porovnal s originálom a všetko zlepil dokopy.

To samozrejme neznamená, že je moja verzia bezchybná, znamená to len, že ašpiruje na to, aby bola najpresnejšia zo všetkých, s ktorými som pracoval. 

Ospravedlňujem sa tiež za chyby a preklepy v slovenčine. Pravopisné chyby, i keď nie vážne, robím pomerne často, kvôli tomu, že po slovensky píšem a hovorím málo a tiež nemám na počítači nainštalovanú kontrolu slovenského pravopisu.

Práca s textom a preklad samotný mi trval asi desať dní, robil som ho vo voľnom čase, a preto hlavne jeho formálna stráknka medzery určite má. Ak by čitatelia našli v texte akékoľvek nepresnosti alebo návrhy ako niečo zlepšiť, budem len rád, ak ich spomenú v komentároch pod týmto článkom. Preklad je len mojim malým dobrovoľným príspevkom k akademickej sinologii a moja vďaka ostatným sinológom, ktorí často zadarmo pracujú na veľkých projektoch ako ctext.org alebo http://tls.uni-hd.de/ ktoré veľmi často využívam. Umenie vojny bolo do slovenčiny preložené aspoň dvakrát, ale jeho text nie je voľne dostupný na internete a vďaka vyššie spomenutému postupu a nepresnostiam ostatných prekladov (na ktorých sú jestvujúce slovenské preklady založené), i keď po formálnej stránke s medzerami, po obsahovej je môj preklad možno snáď o čosi lepší.

Čína je druhou najsilnejšou ekonomikou sveta a či už chceme alebo nie, bolo by dobré ju poznať viac. Ak chceme vedieť, akí Číňania naozaj sú a poznať ich kultúru, musíme v Číne nejakú dobu pobudnúť. Strávil som na Taiwane päť rokov. Po týchto piatich rokoch môžem povedať, že čínsku kultúru chápem, ale len veľmi hmlisto, pričom možno nie so najhorší pozorovateľ. Čínsky svet je podľa mňa jednoducho príliš odlišný od toho nášho, aby sa dal pochopiť čo i piatimi rokmi života v Taipei. Niekoľko osobitostí čínskej kultúry, ktorým som nerozumel, mi ale táto kniha pomohla ozrejmiť a dúfam, že pre ostatných čitateľov bude aspoň zaujímavým rozprávaním. Za všetky citáty v knihe, ktoré sú hodné spomenutia, aspoň jeden:

"Vladár nemôže len na základe svojho hnevu poslať svojich vojakov na nepriateľa a generál nemôže len preto, že sa ho niečo dotklo, ísť do boja. Hýbeme sa, keď je to pre nás výhodné, keď to pre nás výhodné nie je, čakáme. Hnev sa môže zmeniť na radosť a to, že sa nás niečo dotklo sa môže zmeniť na dobrý pocit, ale zničená krajina nemôže opäť povstať a mŕtvi nemôžu opäť ožiť."

Košice, 27.8.2018

Sun c’ - Umenie vojny

Osnovanie plánov

Bambusová verzia knihy Umenie vojny zo zbierky
cisára Čchien Lunga
Sun c’ povedal: Vojna, je výsostne dôležitou záležitosťou pre štát, cestou prežitia a záhuby a jej zákonitosti musia byť podrobne preskúmané. Pri robení plánov a chápaní jej podstaty, je v najzákladnejšej rovine dôležité brať ohľad na nasledovné: 1. Morálny princíp Tao 2. Nebesá 3. Zem 4. Generálov 5. Systém zákonov Fa.

Pokiaľ ide o morálny princíp Tao, vďaka nemu budú mať vojaci rovnaké ciele ako ich vyšší dôstojníci, budú ochotní za nich zomierať, ochotní pre nich žiť a nebudú sa báť žiadneho nebezpečenstva. Pokiaľ ide o nebesá, tie ovládajú Jin a Jang, chlad a teplo a štyri ročné obdobia. Pokiaľ ide o zem, pri nej rolišujeme to, čo je ďaleké a blízke, nebezpečné a bezpečné, široké a úzke, v čom je život a v čom nie. Pokiaľ ide o generálov, tí môžu byť múdri, dôveryhodní, ľudskí, smelí a prísni. Pokiaľ ide o systém zákonov Fa, ten sa týka organizácie armády, správneho nastavenia systému hodností a kontroly výdavkov.

July 05, 2018

Sorma by Sezen Aksu | Cover by Peter Jendrichovsky and Vladimir Skultety

Hello everyone,

I just wanted to share a little piece me and my friend recorded in his house in the north of Slovakia. It is our cover of the beautiful Sorma song by Sezen Aksu. It was impossible to play it as nicely as the original, but we tried :)

My friend used to be one of the best classical guitarists in Slovakia and it was an honor to have him as my teacher when I was young as well as playing this song with him now. I've been playing the guitar since I was 14, almost completely stopped at one point but I am slowly starting to practice again and hope to completely get back into it again someday.  

Have a nice day,

Vladimir

May 01, 2018

My student's key takeaways


Hello everyone,

even though I try hard in my videos and in the articles I write to explain how I am learning languages, I don’t always succeed:) The reason is I’m too deep in the whole process and have been learning languages for so long that everything seems natural and when someone asks me to tell that person what I do, I start explaining stuff from the middle, talk about things I find important and do not necessarily transfer the key premises or elements my learning is based on.

That is why I love when there is someone else who can summarize what I do :) There is a nice Chinese idiom for this

旁觀者清

“Those, observing from the side see things more clearly (than those involved in whatever they are doing).”

March 29, 2018

Interview for gaudeo.sk


We all know what the word polyglot means. Do you consider yourself to be a polyglot? When did you find out that you have a talent for languages? What is your motivation when it comes to language learning? Is language learning something that fulfills you?

A polyglot is a person who speaks several languages, so technically a polyglot is already someone who speaks two. In reality, since there are a lot of opinions on how many languages and at what level a person has to speak in order to be considered a polyglot, it’s more complicated. I think that the lower limit is six languages at a C1 level.

For me personally, the word polyglot was always also associated with praise and to this day I have a problem to talk about myself like that. 

When it comes to when I realized I had a talent for languages, again, it’s a complicated question, because to talk like this about yourself is not easy, but I think I discovered it very early. Probably when I was about 6 or 7 years old. My motivation is most probably interest in foreign languages and foreign cultures in general.

How long does it take you to learn a new language? Lets say an easier one. How do you choose which language you are going to learn next?

February 03, 2018

Understanding Chinese Characters

Learn to recognize 70% of Chinese characters you encounter in a few weeks.

Maybe you want to learn Chinese characters but don’t know where to begin. Or maybe you’ve started studying Chinese characters but found them difficult to remember. Or maybe you would like to have deeper knowledge about Chinese characters that is historically accurate but not overly academic.

Understanding Chinese Characters helps you understand Chinese characters for what they really are, combining the best modern Chinese character academic research with the best learner experience.

This book will give you a firm foundation in how Chinese characters are put together so that you have a deep understanding not only of the characters in the book but also countless other characters that you are likely to come across. You won’t be memorizing endless mnemonics to master each character—you’ll understand how each character sounds and what it means, based on its structure and history.

Books about Chinese characters are either very difficult to read, because they've been written by researchers and are not intended for the everyday learner, or are very reader-friendly and appealing like Chineasy, but are also very imprecise, incomplete, impractical and just frustrating.

Understanding Chinese Characters is easy to read and yet as accurate as the latest academic research allows.

November 11, 2017

Word sculpting

What is word sculpting?

Word sculpting is a way of learning words from top to bottom, slowly removing layers of difficulty on all levels. I started calling it like this for the lack of a better name, but it is pretty accurate actually. 

Imagine you're somewhere at a beginner - intermediate level in Mandarin Chinese and you'd like to learn the Mandarin word for 'situation'.

You ask your friend and they say the word situation in Mandarin is: qíng kuàng

You could either stress your brain and try to remember everything about the word perfectly on your first try - every sound, every aspiration, intonation, tones, word usage etc., or you could break the process down into steps:

Relax and just remember whatever you can in the first step. Lets say, you will only remember that there is an 'i' in the first word and an 'a' in the second:

Step 1: .i.. ..a..

The next time you have to say the word maybe you'll have an easy time recalling the 'i' and the 'a' and in addition you will think: Oh yeah, the first syllable started with an aspirated q sound:

Step 2: qi.. ..a..