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Let's talk about Chinese characters.
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They look tough and scary with all of their random lines, swoops and slashes
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but they're not actually as difficult as you think.
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They're just very different from the phonetic alphabets
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that westerners are used to.
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With alphabets, the letters act like "building blocks"
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that combine to form words.
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When you see the letter "T",
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you know it represents the sound /t/.
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When you see the letters "T-R-E-E",
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you recognize all of those sound symbols
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and you can put them together to form the sound "tree".
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If you want to write the word "tree",
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you think about how to say the word,
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pay attention to the sounds that you make,
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and then write down those letters.
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That's how a phonetic writing system works.
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Chinese is much different though.
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It's a pictographic writing system,
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not a phonetic writing system.
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Being a "pictographic writing system" means that Chinese characters
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are pictures, like Egyptian hieroglyphs.
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So, when you want to write the word "tree"
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you don't have to bother with writing letters
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so the reader can sound-out the word...
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You simply draw a picture of a tree (木).
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It's that simple.
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That's how a pictographic writing system works!
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The Chinese writing system is based on drawings of things they saw
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in the world around them.
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When you look at a Chinese character,
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you are looking at a stylized drawing that depicts an object or an idea.
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If a Chinese character is a picture of an object, like a tree,
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it's called a "pictograph".
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If a Chinese character is a picture of an abstract idea like "three" or "happy"
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it's called an "ideograph", which means "idea picture".
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In layman terms though,
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you can simply refer to the Chinese script as "Chinese characters".
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You are actually quite familiar with pictographs and ideographs;
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you see these types of symbols on a daily basis
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all around the world in the form of street signs and warning labels
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(like recycle, radioactive, wet floor, no swimming, no smoking, etc.).
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These are examples of pictographic symbols
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and they are universally understood because the human mind
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is excellent at pattern matching.
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When an eye sees a pattern,
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the brain has an innate drive to decipher the pattern
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as something it recognizes.
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It's easy enough to draw pictographs for simple objects such as a tree (木),
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fire (火)
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or a multi-floored tower (高) to express the idea "tall".
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However attempting to draw abstract ideas like "have"
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or "may" as in "May I?" is a little more complicated.
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Consider for a moment what you would draw
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to capture the essence of "have/possess".
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Perhaps you could draw a hand with something in it?
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That's exactly what the Chinese ideograph portrays:
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it's a simple two-part picture depicting a hand with an object in it (有).
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How about graphically illustrating the idea "may"?
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What could be drawn to represent this complex idea?
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The actual Chinese ideograph for this (可)
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is composed of two simpler pictographic parts:
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"obstacle" (ㄎ) and "opening" (口).
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By these two simpler pictures combining together,
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they paint a picture that can be interpreted as
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"a way through an obstacle",
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which is a very interesting way to think of getting permission.
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Most Chinese characters work like the two examples above.
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Multiple simple pictographs are combined to convey increasingly
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complex objects and ideas.
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This approach makes sense
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because there is a seemingly endless list of objects, ideas,
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situations, actions, and descriptive words used in communication.
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It would be very difficult for every word to have
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its own completely unique symbol.
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Just for fun, let's look at a few more examples of how
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Chinese characters depict nouns, verbs,
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adjectives, adverbs, prepositions and conjunctions.
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"Autumn" is the season when grain stalks (禾) in the fields are burned (火).
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The verb "see" depicts a hand (龵)
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shading an eye (目) as it gazes into the distance.
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Shells were used as currency in ancient times.
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To make some purchases, an entire basket (貝)
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of shells (貝) was needed, so this is how the Chinese character
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for "expensive" is drawn.
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To express "not", the Chinese character shows a hand (又)
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reaching into swirling water (氵) searching for a lost object (⺇).
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The character for "to" shows a bird swooping down towards the ground (土),
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arriving "to" its destination.
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The conjunction "must" reminds us of an ancient decree imposed on all men
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that required them to maintain long beards and hair (彡) on their heads (頁).
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All of these simple pictographic components
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fit together like puzzle pieces
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to create a balanced visually pleasing Chinese character of uniform size.
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Some of these component parts are thin and tall,
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others are short and wide,
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and some bend.
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Depending on how many of these are combined,
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along with the shape of each component part
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the following layouts are possible:
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2 or 3 component parts might be stacked vertically,
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lined up next to each other horizontally,
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one component could encompass or partially encompass another,
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or any combination of these three.
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There are also rare instances where two components will merge together,
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as if one has been laid on top of the other.
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Additionally, some of these simple pictographic components - but not all -
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are able to stand alone without combining with other components.
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For example, the component "heart" (心) is often combined with other components
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to help relay abstract meanings,
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however it also stands alone for the actual Chinese ideograph "heart".
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The pronunciation of the components is worth learning
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for they sometimes provide clues to the pronunciation
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of the character in which they occur.
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This means that even if it's your first time to see a new Chinese character,
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you can probably guess what it means and also guess how to say the character
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if you recognize all of the smaller parts that are in the character!
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All of the components within a character contribute to its meaning,
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and about half of the time
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one of the components will carry the pronunciation of the entire character.
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However, this doesn't occur consistently
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because the spoken language existed far before the written language.
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When creating Chinese characters, drawing them to relay the meaning
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of the character took precedence over relaying their pronunciation.
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However, as the Chinese script has evolved through the centuries,
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scholars have occasionally added additional components
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to the original version of some characters in an attempt
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to clarify the character's meaning or pronunciation.
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It should also be noted that due to the evolution of the spoken Chinese language
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sometimes the character is no longer pronounced the way it once was,
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and thus the phonetic clue - if present at all -
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may not be completely accurate.
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The red component provides the character's pronunciation
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Alright, you get the idea of how Chinese characters work.
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Now let's talk about numbers.
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People often ask how many Chinese characters there are.
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Different sources give different numbers.
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One of the most famous dictionaries in China, the Kangxi dictionary,
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contains over 47,000 characters.
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The Taiwan Ministry of Education has been working to standardize
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traditional Chinese characters since the 1980's
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and to date they have published a total of 48,172 characters.
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The recently published Hanyu Da Cidian lists over 60,000 characters.
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If we look at computer encoding, due to the necessity to type Chinese characters
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we find that Unicode 5.0 has approximately
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70,000 Chinese characters in its tables.
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And lastly, the 5th official version
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of the Dictionary of Chinese Character Variants contains 106,230 characters.
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The good news is you don't really need to learn all of them.
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The Taiwan Ministry of Education has published
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a list of 4,808 most frequently used traditional Chinese characters,
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followed by an additional 6,341 second most frequently used
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traditional characters.
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In Hong Kong, the Education and Manpower Bureau
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established a list of 4,759 most frequently used traditional characters.
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And in Mainland China,
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the Chart of Common Characters of Modern Chinese only contains
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3,500 in its list.
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The point is, these characters cover 99% of a 2 million word sample,
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which means that to be considered "literate",
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one really only need to recognize 3,500 simplified characters
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or 4,800 traditional characters.
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Phew!
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So there you have it!
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Just by having watched this presentation you are already
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way ahead of the race because you understand
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that Chinese characters are much more
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than just a sequence of lines to be memorized.
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A Chinese character is a picture
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created by combining several simpler pictographic components.
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These simpler pictographic components are the "building blocks"
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of Chinese characters, just like alphabets are the building blocks
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of phonetic languages.
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We hope you enjoyed this "pictographic" video presentation!
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To learn how to use the intrinsic building block nature
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of Chinese characters to your advantage in order
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to quickly learn huge amounts of Chinese characters,
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watch the next video "The ABCS of Chinese Teaching Methodology".
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It will forever change your approach to learning Chinese characters!
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And if you're just starting out or considering if you want to study
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Chinese or not, already living in Asia and functionally illiterate,
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or studying Chinese in university be sure to watch the 3rd segment,
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"The Importance of Learning Chinese".