Classical Chinese

Classical Chinese and , as well as in written vernacular Chinese. The term is read as in Japanese, in Korean, and or in Vietnamese.}} is the language in which the classics of Chinese literature were written, from . For millennia thereafter, the written Chinese used in these works was imitated and iterated upon by scholars in a form now called Literary Chinese, which was used for almost all formal writing in China until the early 20th century. Each written character corresponds to a single spoken syllable, and almost always to a single independent word. As a result, the characteristic style of the language is comparatively terse.
Starting in the 2nd century CE, use of Literary Chinese spread to the countries surrounding China, including Vietnam, Korea, Japan, and the Ryukyu Islands, where it represented the only known form of writing. Literary Chinese was adopted as the language of civil administration in these countries, creating what is known as the Sinosphere. Each additionally developed systems of readings and annotations that enabled non-Chinese speakers to interpret Literary Chinese texts in terms of the local vernacular.
While not static throughout its history, its evolution has traditionally been guided by a conservative impulse: many later changes in the varieties of Chinese are not reflected in the literary form. Due to millennia of this evolution, Literary Chinese is only partially intelligible when read or spoken aloud for someone only familiar with modern vernacular forms. Literary Chinese has largely been replaced by written vernacular Chinese among Chinese speakers; speakers of non-Chinese languages have similarly abandoned Literary Chinese in favour of their own local vernaculars. Although varieties of Chinese have diverged in various directions from the Old Chinese words in the Classical lexicon, many cognates can still be found. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 15 results of 15 for search 'Wen Yan', query time: 0.02s
Refine Results
-
1
Image retrieval based on the feature of VLAD and sparse representation by Wen YAN, Wei JIN, Randi FU
Published 2016-12-01
Article -
2
-
3
-
4
FBG-Based UV-Curing Kinetics Analysis by Exothermic Behavior by Wen Yan, Zhenhua Bi, Ying Song, Xinpu Zhang
Published 2025-01-01
Article -
5
Neural Sliding Mode Adaptive PD Tracking Control of Omnidirectional Mobile Robots by Zhang Kaiwen, Li Guoli, Xu Jiazi, Wang Qunjing, Wen Yan
Published 2023-11-01
Article -
6
-
7
Computation Method for the Settlement of a Vertically Loaded Pile in Sloping Ground by Chong Jiang, Wen-yan Wu, Jia-li He, Lu-jie Chen
Published 2020-01-01
Article -
8
Analytical Solution of Seepage Field in Karst Tunnel by Chong Jiang, Han-song Xie, Jia-li He, Wen-yan Wu, Zhi-chao Zhang
Published 2018-01-01
Article -
9
Effect of Microwave Heating on the Dielectric Properties and Components of Iron-Fortified Milk by Xiao-shu Tang, Da-ming Fan, Feng Hang, Bo-wen Yan, Jian-xin Zhao, Hao Zhang
Published 2017-01-01
Article -
10
Centralized scheduling contention resolution for wireless metropolitan area networks by LU Wen-yan1, JIA Wei-jia1, WANG Guo-jun1, DU Wen-feng1
Published 2006-01-01
Article -
11
Secure deployment strategy of virtual machines based on operating system diversity by Miao ZHANG, Xin-sheng JI, Jian-jian AI, Wen-yan LIU, Hong-chao HU, Shu-min HUO
Published 2017-10-01
Article -
12
-
13
-
14
-
15
Nomogram-derived immune-inflammation-nutrition score could act as a novel prognostic indicator for patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma by Wen-Yan Wang, Yue Chen, Qian Chen, Hong-Wei Sun, Nuo-Xuan Niu, Hong-Hui Li, Yu-Dan Cao, Yan-Xia Bai, Xiang Li, Xiang Li
Published 2025-01-01
Article