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The First 100 Chinese Characters: Simplified Character Edition: The Quick and Easy Method to Learn the 100 Most Basic Chinese Characters (Tuttle Language Library) | 
enlarge | Authors: Laurence Matthews, Alison Matthews Publisher: Tuttle Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $7.96 You Save: $6.99 (47%)
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 34227
Media: Paperback Pages: 128 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 8.5 x 0.3
ISBN: 0804838305 Dewey Decimal Number: 495 EAN: 9780804838306 ASIN: 0804838305
Publication Date: January 15, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: New; Excellent condition! Clean crisp tight copy, no marks,could have some minor shelf wear. Email Notification, Satisfaction Guaranteed,Direct from our warehouse.
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Product Description The major struggle facing all beginning Chinese language students is to learn to recognize, read and write hundreds of Chinese characters. This book adopt a structural approach that helps students overcome this initial difficulty and quickly master the basic Chinese characters fundamental to this language. Intended for beginning students, The First 100 Chinese Characters: Simplified Character Edition contains carefully selected and sequenced characters for rapid and effective learning. Each Chinese character is shown separately on a single page, along with its English definitions, hanyu pinyin romanization, alternate form, a stroke-order guide and ample writing space. Two indexes alphabetical by the English meanings and by pinyin romanization are provided at the back of each book for quick and easy reference, along with extra sheets of blank boxes for writing practice.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Really useful September 30, 2008 Jane Steen (Libertyville, Illinois USA) This book really does have the characters you need to know for a basic understanding of Mandarin. I like the fact that it supplies a proper grid, gives you both stroke order and direction, and shows the radical for each character. If you're new to learning Chinese, I'd also recommend flashcards (or make your own based on this book) because constant repetition is the key here.
The First 100 Chinese Characters September 1, 2008 H. Klemm (Sacramento, CA) This is the first of two books for learning 100 Chinese characters. The pages are well thought out and also show the use of each newly learned character in combination with other Chinese words, they call 'common words'. On each page one learns and practices only one character. Perhaps this sounds easy until one has to do it. The detailed progress of how to write each character is very well done. It is definitely not easy to duplicate with either a pen or a pencil, because brush strokes were used by the author, thus one's finished 'product' does not look as good. This can be quite frustrating to a perfectionist. However, it is a good tool for anyone who is a serious student of the Chinese language and its written form. Both volumes are done and presented the same way and therefore did not necessitate to write two reviews.
Good introduction to writing August 24, 2008 Nathan Dummitt (New York, NY) This book is most useful for students with no exposure to the Chinese writing system. After a clear and thorough introduction to the history and development of Chinese characters, students are introduced to 100 basic characters - a nice attainable number for the first year of high school instruction or the first semester at the university level. Each entry includes several example compounds (very important for Chinese, in which disparate characters can be combined discretely to form unexpected words) as well as nice, large boxes for practicing. While the Matthews have made a nice introduction to Chinese characters, more serious students of the language will outgrow it quite quickly. Their newer book Tuttle Learning Chinese Characters Volume 1: A Revolutionary New Way to Learn and Remember the 800 Most Basic Chinese Characters provides several hundred more characters (without the practice space) for the more ambitious. Nathan Dummitt author of Chinese Through Tone & Color
The first 100Chinese Characters July 24, 2008 Madeline M. Allen (VA Beach, VA) I have been trying to learn the Chinese characters on my own.This book has been most helpful. I would also reccommend "The Chinese Language" It gives a background on the development of the language .I now know more about the Chinese language than I do English.
Organized, helpful, great workbook. July 15, 2008 M. Cheung (Alabama, USA) I am learning to speak Mandarin but felt I needed more knowledge of the written language to get a more comprehensive feel for the language. I looked around and settled on this one and it was a good choice. It has just enough information for me to learn the character and its meaning as well as some commonly used phrases in which each character appears. It gives ample space to practice the strokes of the character. The characters are also in a type size that makes it easier to read than some other books I've looked at.
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