Comments: CHINESE TEXT PROJECT.


Very useful? Understatement is not your usual mode, LH. Such thorough and orderly analysis of each character is mind-bogglingly worthwhile. So accessible! Thanks for the link.

Posted by Noetica at November 26, 2008 03:20 PM

I agree, humbleness doesn't suit you LH!! :)
I too was really happy to learn of this tool.
Thanks.

Posted by Peony at November 26, 2008 03:48 PM

Couldn't agree more. This is a great resource, I wish I'd known about it before spending an hour looking up an obscure text in the library this afternoon! Thanks a lot!

Posted by Daniel at November 26, 2008 04:40 PM

Ah, once again my premonitions of futility turn out to be misplaced! Now I'm glad I posted it.

Posted by language hat at November 26, 2008 07:51 PM

This resource is absolutely amazing. Absolutely fabulous.

I have great difficulty with Classical Chinese. The language is incredibly difficult to get a handle on because of its terseness. This resource helps a lot, although the bodily lifting of dictionary definitions without telling you exactly what sense is meant still leaves you scratching your head. For example, what are you to make of 其 when it is defined like this:

Third-person possessive pronoun: his, her, its, their. / Demonstrative pronoun: that, those. / Adverb expressing estimation or guess. / Adverb expressing imperative. / Adverb expressing rhetorical question. / Adverb expressing future tense. / Connective expressing hypothesis: if, supposing. / Connective expressing choice: or. / Connective expressing concession: even if. / Particle used after an adjective. / Particle: of. / Particle used for emphasis after single-character adjectives or onomatopoeia. / Particle used in the middle of a sentence to alter the tempo.

The other problem is that a lot of this stuff frankly leaves me cold. I'm not sure how 2,500 years of sophisticated civilisation could be built on gems like this:

They are few who, being filial and fraternal, are fond of offending against their superiors. There have been none, who, not liking to offend against their superiors, have been fond of stirring up confusion. The superior man bends his attention to what is radical. That being established, all practical courses naturally grow up. Filial piety and fraternal submission! - are they not the root of all benevolent actions?

Posted by bathrobe at November 26, 2008 08:33 PM

Although the site has existed for a while, the more accessible annotation and search system would help many a Classical Chinese reader immensely. I'm an occasional user of the site, though I haven't looked up them recently so I didn't know they provide parallel passages now.

In fact, if I'm looking up for some Chinese canonical text, this is usually the site I ended up as they have rather well-edited and annotated text. Especially for some lesser known texts, this is probably the only online extant source! Even for Chinese, the completeness of pre-Qin and Han classics there is seldom repeated elsewhere.

Posted by 28481k at November 26, 2008 10:02 PM

I think it good for you to have this idea, and I've checked that site which is really amazing. As we all know ancient Chinese is so difficult and let alone the philosophy part.

[Spam link removed. —LH]

Posted by shellyuan at November 29, 2008 09:39 AM

The last entry is a spam link to an online Chinese school, by the way.

Posted by bathrobe at December 1, 2008 06:30 AM

Thanks, I removed it. Naughty, naughty shellyuan, slipping a spam link past the Hat!

Posted by language hat at December 1, 2008 07:44 AM