Practical Chinese Reader

Practical Chinese Reader

Practical Chinese Reader is a series of Chinese language teaching books developed to teach non-Chinese speakers to speak Chinese. The reader follows the antics of Palanka and Gubo through various stages. Practical Chinese Reader is administered by the Chinese Department of Culture and most students of Mandarin in a classroom setting probably have contact with the book. The course consists of a Chinese reader, character workbook, and grammar workbook. It was first published in 1981 by Beijing Language and Culture University Press (BLCUP)[1]. Allows the use of writing in typical Chinese PinYin.

New Practical Chinese Reader

Practical Chinese Reader was completely revised in 2002, and was re-published as New Practical Chinese Reader. New teaching material and concepts were added, while older words not in common use were removed. The new series consists of six volumes: the first four targeting beginners, while the last two are geared for intermediate learners. The New Practical Chinese Reader pays homage to the older edition by introducing a new character, Libo, who is the son of Gubo and Ding Yun from the original edition.

English Version (Simplified Chinese or Traditional Chinese), German version, French Version, Russian version are available. Other language versions are to be published soon.

The characters

Gubo (古波): Young male student, non-Chinese. The name's transliteration is uncertain but Cooper or Gilbert has been suggested.

Palanka (帕兰卡): Young female student, non Chinese, Gubo's friend. Chosen as a Western sounding name, the original being possibly Bianca

Ding Yun (丁云): Young female student, Chinese, Palanka's friend.

Ding Libo (丁力波): Son of Gubo and Ding Yun. Introduced in the NPCR.
Ma Dawei (马大为): An American male student, whose real name is David March. Introduced in "NPCR".
Lin Na (林娜):A British female Student, whose real name is Natalie Lynn. Introduced in "NPCR".
Wang Xiaoyun (王小云): A Chinese female student. Introduced in "NPCR".
Song Hua (宋华): A Chinese male student. Introduced in "NPCR".
Lu Yuping (陆雨平): A Chinese male reporter. Introduced in "NPCR".

Page two of the NPCR reads:

A Canadian Student, aged 21, male Gubo is his father Ding Yun is his mother.

In accordance with keeping the dialogue the same, the characters are given universal names in translations of the book across all languages.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chinese language — Unless otherwise specified, Chinese texts in this article are written in (Simplified Chinese/Traditional Chinese; Pinyin) format. In cases where Simplified and Traditional Chinese scripts are identical, the Chinese term is written once. Chinese… …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese character — Chinese pic=Hanzi.svg!200px picc Traditional Chinese (hanzi, kanji, hanja, and hán tự) Right: Chinese character in Simplified Chinese s=汉字 t=漢字 kanji=漢字 p=Audio|zh han4zi4.ogg|Hànzì j=hon3 zi6 poj=Hàn jī teo=hang3 ri7 lmz=IPA| [høz] hiragana=かんじ… …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese Information Operations and Information Warfare — are based on concepts and terms similar to those used by the United States, but the Chinese have evolved them to be more suitable and relevant to Chinese culture and to communist doctrine. While the People s Republic of China has adopted the idea …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese characters — Unless otherwise specified Chinese text in this article is written in the format (Simplified Chinese / Traditional Chinese; Pinyin). In cases where the Simplified and Traditional Chinese characters are identical, the Chinese term is written only… …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese literature — Introduction       the body of works written in Chinese, including lyric poetry, historical and didactic writing, drama, and various forms of fiction.       Chinese literature is one of the major literary heritages of the world, with an… …   Universalium

  • Chinese fire drill — A Chinese fire drill is a slang term that has been used by Westerners for more than a century, and is today considered offensive or racist.[1][2][3] It is used to describe any situation that is chaotic or confusing.[4] It is also used to describe …   Wikipedia

  • History of Chinese art — Chinese art is art that, whether ancient or modern, originated in or is practiced in China or by Chinese artists or performers. Early so called stone age art dates back to 10,000 BC, mostly consisting of simple pottery and sculptures. This early… …   Wikipedia

  • Han Trainer Pro — Entwickler Programmierung und Vertrieb: Rainer Stahlmann Aktuelle Version 4.25 Betriebssystem Windows, MAC, Linux, PDA Kategorie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Beijing Language and Culture University Press — (BLCUP)(北京语言大学出版社) is a publisher that specializes in publishing Chinese textbooks. Established in 1985, it is attached to the Beijing Language and Culture University. BLCUP is the only publishing house in China dedicated solely to the… …   Wikipedia

  • PCR (disambiguation) — PCR may refer to: Political parties: Partido Comunista Revolucionario (see disambiguation) the Communist Party of Réunion (Parti Communiste Réunionnais) the Romanian Communist Party (Partidul Communist Român) Others: Pcr, Phosphocreatine P. Craig …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”