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你好!I'm a Chinese. I can use Chinese, English, and Japanese during communication, these three languages gives me totally different using experiment.
If you are an English native speaker, Latin-system languages are quite easy for you to understand and pronounciate. It is because they are based on alphabet, so you can create word by combine letters. However it's different in Chinese or Japanese. The 'morphem' means 'minimun unit in a language which has meaning', in Chinese it's Chinese character, in Japanese it's kana and kanji. Chinese has tens of thousands of characters... Chinese people averagely knows 3000-7000 characters. In daily life, 1000 characters is enough.
So the most difficult point is, how to memorize these characters and pronounce them correctly? Chinese uses Pinyin to mark pronounciation, it's a Latin-system but differ from normally western accent. Japanese uses Romaji, obviously it's transformed from Latin. To memorize strokes and pronounciation of each word is a key point learning Chinese.
And as it's said, Chinese grammar is the most simple one, in fact I doubt this point. Rather than 'simple' I think it's 'high-variated' and 'free'. We can say 'I am 16 years old' as 'I 16 year', here we just ignore the link verb, and '16 year' is verb now. And Chinese don't mark '-s' as multiple-form of noun, we just say 1year, 2year, 3year... no need of 's'.
Chinese grammar usually is S-V-O but Japanese grammar is S-O-V. Look at this sentence:'I have an apple.' Chinese says '我(I) 有(have) 一个(an) 苹果(apple)' Japanese says '私(I) は リンゴ(apple) を 持って(have) います'. Here you can see the different.
There is too many detail to share with you, my friend, but it's better to explore by yourself. This world has 100+ languages, and no matter what you wanna learn, the best way learning it is practice day by day. May success waiting upon you efforts.
乐观的食用盐
If you are an English native speaker, Latin-system languages are quite easy for you to understand and pronounciate. It is because they are based on alphabet, so you can create word by combine letters. However it's different in Chinese or Japanese. The 'morphem' means 'minimun unit in a language which has meaning', in Chinese it's Chinese character, in Japanese it's kana and kanji. Chinese has tens of thousands of characters... Chinese people averagely knows 3000-7000 characters. In daily life, 1000 characters is enough.
So the most difficult point is, how to memorize these characters and pronounce them correctly? Chinese uses Pinyin to mark pronounciation, it's a Latin-system but differ from normally western accent. Japanese uses Romaji, obviously it's transformed from Latin. To memorize strokes and pronounciation of each word is a key point learning Chinese.
And as it's said, Chinese grammar is the most simple one, in fact I doubt this point. Rather than 'simple' I think it's 'high-variated' and 'free'. We can say 'I am 16 years old' as 'I 16 year', here we just ignore the link verb, and '16 year' is verb now. And Chinese don't mark '-s' as multiple-form of noun, we just say 1year, 2year, 3year... no need of 's'.
Chinese grammar usually is S-V-O but Japanese grammar is S-O-V. Look at this sentence:'I have an apple.' Chinese says '我(I) 有(have) 一个(an) 苹果(apple)' Japanese says '私(I) は リンゴ(apple) を 持って(have) います'. Here you can see the different.
There is too many detail to share with you, my friend, but it's better to explore by yourself. This world has 100+ languages, and no matter what you wanna learn, the best way learning it is practice day by day. May success waiting upon you efforts.