Lesson 8 of the "Learn Chinese with Serena" series has been premiered on the Day2DayChinese channel of Youtube.
The lesson is about making when-question sentences with 何时[hé shí]. The video also discusses variations of 何时[hé shí] in writings as well as in day-to-day speeches.
There is a new word with radical 辵(辶)[chuò] that is categorized as a 7-strokes radical in dictionaries but is counted as 3 strokes in the total counts of the word.
A third-person pronoun with "woman" radical 女[nǔ] first introduced into the Chinese literature in the 1910s is presented in this lesson too.
This lesson contains a section dedicated to word stroke orders and animations.
There are seven new words in this lesson.
Accompanying the publication of each lesson at the Day2Day Chinese channel on Youtube , I have also published a number of Chinese Calligraphy Worksheets for my students to practice their handwriting.
Chinese use 10 Celestial Stems 天干[tiān gān] and 12 Terrestrial Branches 地支[dì zhī] to name, count and record the year, the month, the day, and the hour of time. The ancient Chinese believed that the earth was separated from heaven (sky), and then there are people. The heaven is to the earth as the trunk to the branch. Therefore, they took celestial stem and terrestrial branch in terms to count, symbolizes, and record the time. 天干地支[tiān gān dì zhī] can be abbreviated to "Stem and Branch" 干支[gān zhī]. Today, 干支[gān zhī] is still used in calendars, fortune-telling, sacrificial ceremony, counting, name giving, etc.
A new video clip of Listen and Practice section of Lesson 10 had been uploaded and added to the playlist " Listen to Chinese with Serena ." The playlist now contains 74 sentences to listen to with each one repeats three times.
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