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Using Audacity to learn Chinese (speaking and listening)
By Olle Linge On May 14, 2013 · 7 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening, Recommended resources, Speaking
Audacity is a marvellous piece of software that allows you to record audio (yourself, other people or whatever is playing on your computer), mimic native speakers, edit and enhance the audio, as well as automatically manipulate multiple files, such as lecture or lesson recordings. In short, Audacity is a really good program for learning languages. This article introduces the software both through a video example and explaining text.
Adding tone marks (w/o Pinyin) above characters to practise tones
By Olle Linge On May 8, 2013 · 19 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Distinctively Chinese, Intermediate, Reading
Reading in Chinese is hard, but if we use too much Pinyin, we will never get used to reading characters. Adding tones (but not Pinyin) above characters is a good way of helping us to focus on tone production, separating the problem of remembering tones from the problem of producing tones, enabling us to focus on the latter.
Children learn languages neither quickly nor effortlessly. Adults have several advantages that allow us to learn more efficiently. It’s true that children achieve better pronunciation and accent, but not mainly because they are children, but because adults don’t care enough, don’t receive enough feedback or don’t spend enough time. So, no, you’re not too old. You might be too lazy, too close-minded or too busy, but you’re definitely not too old.
You don’t have to go abroad to learn Chinese. The main difference between staying at home and going abroad is that it requires less effort to learn once you’re there (although it still requires quite a lot of effort). This means that you can learn Chinese at home, provided that you are determined enough and create an immersion environment yourself. This article gives suggestions and advice on how to achieve that.
Learning the right chengyu the right way
By Olle Linge On April 17, 2013 · 12 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Distinctively Chinese, Intermediate, Vocabulary
Many people regard chengyu as the golden key to the Chinese language and believe that learning chengyu will impress native speakers and take their Chinese to the next level. However, learning chengyu in the wrong way is likely to have the opposite effect (“oh, the foreigner is trying to use chengyu, how cute!”). Focus should be on chengyu that are truly useful and frequently used, the rest should be left for those who really like chengyu or for truly advanced students.
The question you have to ask about your Chinese teacher or course
By Olle Linge On April 10, 2013 · 6 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning in class
The most important question you should ask yourself about your current teacher or course is what you won’t learn. Since this isn’t something most teachers and schools like to talk about, it’s typically something you need to figure out on your own. This article discusses this question from various angles, highlighting the importance of being aware of what you need to study on your own.
You shouldn’t walk the road to Chinese fluency alone
By Olle Linge On March 20, 2013 · 9 Comments · In Advanced, Attitude and mentality, Beginner, Intermediate
The road to Chinese mastery is long, but fortunately, you don’t have to walk it alone. This article describes four different kinds of people and how they will help you to master Chinese: the local, the traveller, the supporter and the guide. They all have their different strengths and you should learn what they are in order to make the journey as smooth as possible.
14 extra songs to learn Chinese and expand your horizons
By Olle Linge On March 13, 2013 · 5 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening
This is the fourth and possibly final article about Chinese music. As before, the goal this time is to expand your horizons a bit and help you find music you like. Music is useful because it’s fun and is a relaxed way of learning. We need learning of all kinds if we want to learn fast, so music fulfils a really important function.
There are many online resources for looking up Chinese characters and words, so many that it might be very hard for new learners to find what they need. This article introduces 21 dictionaries and corpora for Chinese learners, including what they should be used for in addition to some pros and cons.
Horizontal vocabulary learning
By Olle Linge On February 27, 2013 · 11 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Distinctively Chinese, Intermediate, Key study hacks, Learning outside class, Vocabulary
The normal thing to do when we learning characters or words is to focus on deepening our knowledge, researching components and understanding more about what we’re trying to learn. Some problems can’t be alleviated this way, however, instead they call for horizontal vocabulary learning, i.e. to putting the character or word into context and to compare it with similar characters or words. Only then can we grasp the bigger picture.
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Welcome!
Essential articles
Beginner
Intermediate
Advanced
Vocabulary
Listening
Speaking
Reading
Writing
Attitude and mentality
Organising and planning
Key study hacks
Learning in class
Learning outside class
Immersion and integration
Distinctively Chinese
Recommended resources
Science and research
A chronological list of all posts
An alphabetical list of all tags
About Hacking ChineseTwitter
Recent Comments
- Sean on Don’t use mnemonics for everything
- Sean on Adding tone marks (w/o Pinyin) above characters to practise tones
- David Lloyd-Jones on Want to master Chinese in no time? Start dreaming!*
- Olle Linge on Using Audacity to learn Chinese (speaking and listening)
- Olle Linge on Using Audacity to learn Chinese (speaking and listening)
Recent Posts
- Using Audacity to learn Chinese (speaking and listening)
- Adding tone marks (w/o Pinyin) above characters to practise tones
- Hacking Chinese meet-up in Taipei 2013-05-12
- You might be too lazy to learn Chinese, but you’re not too old
- Immersion at home or: Why you don’t have to go abroad to learn Chinese
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