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"Reading"
Adding tone marks (w/o Pinyin) above characters to practise tones
By Olle Linge On May 8, 2013 · 18 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.
The Cthulhu bubble and studying Chinese
By Olle Linge On February 19, 2013 · 6 Comments · In Advanced, Attitude and mentality, Beginner, Intermediate, Listening, Reading
What does learning Chinese have to do with the Cthulhu Mythos? Quite a lot, actually. This article is about your bubble of safety and what happens when monsters (weird, difficult cases) appear and what you should do to avoid insanity. In short, don’t poke the monster in the eye; when encountering strange cases, either ignore them or memorise them, don’t waste time understanding everything you hear or see.
Measurable progress is a double-edged sword
By Olle Linge On December 11, 2012 · 7 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening, Organising and planning, Reading, Vocabulary
Spaced repetition software offers a great way of measuring progress, every step forward is recorded and clearly visible. However, this is also a trap, because even though SRS is useful, it’s just a tool, not a comprehensive strategy. Measurable progress is a great help, but only if you use it correctly.
Chat your way to better Chinese
By Olle Linge On October 30, 2012 · 2 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Reading, Vocabulary, Writing
Chatting is an excellent way of learning a language. Some people think chatting online is a waste of time, but in this article I list and explain a dozen reasons why this is wrong. In fact, chatting offer many advantages that are very hard to find elsewhere.
31 Twitter feeds to help you learn Chinese
By Olle Linge On July 23, 2012 · 13 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Reading, Recommended resources
Twitter is an excellent source for learning Chinese. In this article, I list my favourite Twitter feeds in three categories: learning how to learn Chinese, learning how to learn languages in general and finally Chinese input on Twitter. Something missing in the article? Let me know!
This article is a guide to reading comics in Chinese, suitable for beginners as well as those who already have some experience. Reading comics is an excellent way of attacking the Great Wall of Chinese (the daunting effect of seeing a whole page of text and not knowing what to do). It’s also fun, which is arguably the most important thing.
Reading is one of the best ways of picking up new vocabulary once we reached an intermediate or advanced level, but it’s also necessary to read a lot to be able to write Chinese properly. Reading also enables us to understand word usage and brings us closer to the culture behind the language. This article is focused on reading in Chinese, including reading method, book selection, benchmarking, vocabulary and more.
The 10,000 hour rule – Blood, sweat and tears
By Olle Linge On March 4, 2012 · 16 Comments · In Advanced, Attitude and mentality, Beginner, Essential articles, Intermediate, Listening, Reading, Science and research
The 10,000 hour rule is quite simple. It states that it takes roughly 10,000 hours of practice to become really good at something. The most important lesson here is that talent is far less important that people think. Even towering geniuses work very hard. Blood, sweat and tears are what counts in the end, not talent.
Learning simplified and traditional Chinese
By Olle Linge On January 29, 2012 · 17 Comments · In Advanced, Beginner, Distinctively Chinese, Intermediate, Reading, Recommended resources, Writing
Learning traditional characters if you know simplified or vice versa is a lot easier than beginners tend to think. Generally, you don’t need to worry, because at an advanced level, learning both is quite easy. This article is about simplified/traditional and how to learn both.
Can you become fluent in Chinese in three months?
By Olle Linge On January 8, 2012 · 41 Comments · In Attitude and mentality, Beginner, Intermediate, Learning outside class, Listening, Reading, Speaking
Can you (or Benny Lewis) become fluent in Chinese in three months? I think the answer is no, but instead of just being negative, I’ve tried to describe some problems and offer some help on how to solve them.
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Table of Contents
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
- Olle Linge - Languages, literature and the pursuit of dreams · Introducing creative Saturadays on Want to master Chinese in no time? Start dreaming!*
- Scott on Using Audacity to learn Chinese (speaking and listening)
- nommoc on Chinese character challenge: Towards a more sensible way of learning to write Chinese
- nommoc on Chinese character challenge: Towards a more sensible way of learning to write Chinese
- Olle Linge on Chinese character challenge: Towards a more sensible way of learning to write Chinese
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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