QUOTE(fujisan_8 @ Dec 17 2004, 03:35 AM)
I think a lot of you missed the point. I'm not talking about some skilled person inputting the words rather, an average Joe.
Why dont I tell Japanese, Koreans, Vietnamese and Thais to modify or abolish their writing system? Simply because its a mapping of the phoentic sounds of their language, an efficienct system. Whilst Chinese is a language that has a long history, it remains just that, an archiac kind of language. Btw, TONES SOUND UGLY *its a general rule that the more tones a language has, the less its pleasing to the ear*. This is why there is always a preference amongst AFers for Japanese or Korean (no tones) over Mandarin (4) and Mandarin over Cantonese or Vietnamese which has 5 to 9.
Why isnt Vietnamese popular amongst Westerners? Simply because its not as economically useful as Chinese is, hardly ANY WESTERNER was interested in Chinese say 10 years ago.
The Chinese script ISNT really logical in a sense that it doesnt represent anything that the avg Joe can use intuition to "guess" or "make sense" of the word.
PLus the tones, can anyone hear give me some valid reasons as why they would be better than a toneless language?
An unskilled typist at English can't type jack, either. Of course a Chinese typist needs experience to be able to type fast, but once he has it, he can type rapid-speed.
Japanese and Korean aren't monotonal, they have pitch patterns to them. For example, most westerners pronounce Korea as ko-REE-a, but Koreans pronounce it KO-ree-a. Manna (meeting) is pronounced man-NA, not MAN-na.
Tones help a listener distinguish between two words that are otherwise homophones and sound the same. Mandarin, unlike English needs it, because there are far more homophones in Mandarin than in English. Without tones, the words for "buy" and "sell" would sound the same. English doens't need tones because it has a far more complex phonemic structure than Mandarin. For example
1)Consonant clusters:
sphere,
spring,
black
2)Ending sounds: Mandarin only has -n and -ng, otherwise they end with vowels, English can end with any letter of the English alphabet.
3)Multi-syllabism: English is a very multi-syllabic language, while Mandarin isn't. Words in Mandarin rarely exceed two syllables in length. Shi can mean: yes, poet, lion, city, world, ten, etc, baozi can mean bun or newspaper, and of course pronounce da feiji wrong and you'll say "masterbate" when they meant "board an airplane")...........which brings me to another point
4)Non-phonetic spelling: English distinguishes homophones through irregular spelling: lead vs led, to vs too vs two, do vs due, leek vs leak, for vs four, etc. The problem is much higher in Mandarin because of the much increased amount of homones, and you either have a problem of an alphabet that corresponds with sounds but leads to much confusion, or an alphabet with tons of irregularities that require memorization thus no longer easy to learn.
5)Grammatical features: Plurals are indicated with "-s" or "-es", tenses in verbs are indicated by suffixing "-ing", "-ed", thus lessening the ambiguation and making it impossible to mistake one part of speech for another. Thus, because of grammar, you won't mistake "fishing" for "fish" or "to ram" with the animal "ram". Chinese has a different grammar system, where words aren't modified in context. Thus the problem of homophony remains, and tones are used to distinguish different words.
6)Besides which, research has shown that children who grew up with tonal languages are more likely to achieve musical aptitude, because their ability to distinguish tones gives them pick out tones and relative and absolute pitch in music.
How exactly do you plan on modifying Chinese to the extent that it doesn't need to be tonal? Do a drastic overhual of the sound system, makeover the entire vocabulary, add in lots of new sounds, consonants, dipthongs, clusters, and ending sounds and get people to learn them all, adopt irregular spelling, change to a new grammar system. Hell, might as well just abandon the language and start over again.
Let me ask you a question. Do you actually know how to speak, read, write, or type Chinese? Hell, are you even Chinese?