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  2. Chinese pronouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_pronouns

    Among users of traditional Chinese characters, these distinctions are only made in Taiwanese Mandarin; in simplified Chinese, tā (它) is the only third-person non-human form and nǐ (你) is the only second person form. The third person distinction between "he" (他) and "she" (她) remain in use in all forms of written standard Mandarin. [3]

  3. Mandarin Chinese profanity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_Chinese_profanity

    The Traditional Chinese characters for the word huài dàn (坏蛋/壞蛋), a Mandarin Chinese profanity meaning, literally, "bad egg". Profanity in Mandarin Chinese most commonly involves sexual references and scorn of the object's ancestors, especially their mother. Other Mandarin insults accuse people of not being human.

  4. Chinese character radicals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_character_radicals

    Chinese characters. A radical (Chinese: 部首; pinyin: bùshǒu; lit. 'section header'), or indexing component, is a visually prominent component of a Chinese character under which the character is traditionally listed in a Chinese dictionary. The radical for a character is typically a semantic component, but can also be another structural ...

  5. Hua Mulan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hua_Mulan

    Hua Mulan. Mulan as depicted in the album Gathering Gems of Beauty (畫麗珠萃秀) (Qing dynasty; ca 18th century). Hua Mulan (Chinese: 花木蘭) is a legendary Chinese folk heroine from the Northern and Southern dynasties era (4th to 6th century CE) of Chinese history. Scholars generally consider Mulan to be a fictional character.

  6. Nüshu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nüshu

    Nüshu (𛆁𛈬 ‎; simplified Chinese: 女书; traditional Chinese: 女書; pinyin: Nǚshū [ny˨˩˨ʂu˦]; lit. 'women's script') is a syllabic script derived from Chinese characters that was used exclusively among ethnic Yao women [3] in Jiangyong County in Hunan province of southern China for several centuries before almost going extinct.

  7. Radical 38 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_38

    Radical 38 or radical woman ( 女部) meaning "woman" or "female" is one of the 31 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals total) composed of three strokes . In the Kangxi Dictionary, there are 681 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this radical . 女 is also the 56th indexing component in the Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components ...

  8. Fenghuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fenghuang

    "Dragon-and-phoenix infants" (龍鳳胎; 龙凤胎) is a Chinese term for a set of male and female fraternal twins. Fenghuang is a common place name throughout China. The best known is Fenghuang County in western Hunan, southern China, formerly a sub-prefecture. Its name is written with the same Chinese characters as the mythological bird.

  9. Chinese character classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_character...

    A straightforward structural classification scheme may consist of three pure classes of semantographs, phonographs and signs —having only semantic, phonetic, and form components respectively, as well as classes corresponding to each combination of component types. [11] Of the 3500 characters that are frequently used in Standard Chinese, pure ...