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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
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LearningTranscript
00:04Seven is better
00:06Seven is better
00:06What is it, my son?
00:07Is the taste of the beans good or what?
00:08Huh?
00:09What is this sight?
00:10Why is your mind empty?
00:11Is this what another Chinese sub-band looks like?
00:13Where is the student?
00:13Honestly, Doctor
00:14Yes
00:16Nobody likes attending an 8-0 lecture
00:18Generally, he confirmed it like that.
00:19No, I'm not calling, Sami, and I'm not taking any advice.
00:20Okay, a thousand blessings, let's solve the problem of the hot potatoes in the cafeteria.
00:23But I'll take it this time
00:24Don't you want to learn Chinese or what?
00:26Who are we?
00:28I just
00:28Oh, I say, "No."
00:29I want to learn Chinese
00:31Wu Ya Chi Wangjin
00:33Wu Ya Chi Wangjin
00:35She was satisfied and relaxed
00:36I'll tell you what I'm saying
00:37Wu Qi Oud Wu Wanjin
00:39Marfo Alik
00:39So you've started
00:41You told me you wanted to learn Chinese
00:43A very simple topic
00:44We will learn seventy thousand letters together
00:47And we remain distinguished in the Chinese language the next day.
00:50A simple, easy topic that will change my life
00:52Take this review sheet as a gift
00:54Sorry, the code got a little slow.
00:56Nothing is visible
00:57Just so the library doesn't hit it
00:59They take notes from me
01:01They sell them and photograph them
01:02And the Balkiya
01:03Thank you, Doctor
01:04Let me tell you about my visit to Guangzhou
01:08After Shenzhen increased the number of Hong Kong's cheeks
01:11When I went there, I saw love and feelings
01:14I never saw her anywhere.
01:16To honor science and scientists
01:17Did you notice that some of them were male and female students?
01:22I wasn't born a doctor
01:23Why did you do this to myself?
01:24Praise be to God, thanks to God
01:26I worked hard and obtained a Chinese doctorate (Haikobi).
01:29Just a second, doctor
01:30To be honest, I actually
01:32What exactly?
01:33What do you want to say, boy?
01:34No, not at all.
01:36No need
01:41Thank God, I have finally found my successor.
01:44Okay, Bathan, file it for next week.
01:47Get ready, and anything you didn't explain to us in the scholarships
01:49Praise be to God
01:51Are there any Japanese people with us too?
02:00Dear viewers, welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
02:03In November 2017
02:04During US President Trump's visit to Beijing
02:07While Chinese President Xi Jinping
02:09He is proud of his presence
02:10Its history is written in Chinese and is 3000 years old.
02:13They provoke Trump and say
02:15Egyptian civilization spans more than 8000 years
02:18It means either nothing, or Uncle Chen
02:19And he presented to the people of Xi Jinping a difficult response.
02:23He says it, but our language and culture are completely different up to this point.
02:26Ah, how are they?
02:28The idea is that the Egyptians are the ones who are better, not the Americans.
02:30According to an article in The Economist in 2023
02:31Xi Jinping is a person who speaks Chinese fluently.
02:34And Mahooz, using its eloquent words
02:36To the point that in the studies
02:37By analyzing what is called "she style"
02:39His rhetorical and linguistic style during his speeches
02:42According to the article
02:42Bing's eloquence and skill in using difficult words
02:45The cause is what is called cultural self-confidence.
02:48Confidence in his civilization
02:49A constant desire to showcase the greatness of the Chinese language and Chinese civilization
02:53In a desire to instill cultural self-confidence
02:55He appears to his people as an extension of the emperors of China.
02:58Guardians and masters of the language
02:59On the other hand, there's also Jinping.
03:01He is the first Chinese ruler to be fluent in English.
03:04He also uses it in his sculptures to prove
03:06China is capable of communicating with the world
03:08Xi Jinping's emphasis on mastering one's own language and the language of others
03:11A paradox emerges
03:12The linguistic paradox of truth
03:13A very intriguing paradox emerges
03:16This paradox has existed in the Chinese language since ancient times.
03:19Throughout the history of the Chinese language
03:20You see great confidence in its quality
03:22There is great concern about its complexity.
03:24If you, my dear, were to look at the history of the Chinese language
03:26You will always find a conflict between the power of the Chinese language
03:29And the great concern about its linguistic complexity
03:31There is a constant desire that we preserve it
03:33As an extension of China's history
03:34But there's also a hidden anxiety.
03:36The difficulty of this language remains a prison.
03:38It prevents them from communicating with the world.
03:40Because, my dear, every language is a repository of a nation's history.
03:42It is also a bridge for communication with others.
03:45The Chinese language, my dear, and its characters
03:47It could have been the barrier that destroyed this bridge
03:50And it leaves the Chinese isolated forever.
03:52The current Chinese government is led by Xi Jinping.
03:54The company we win and its products are available everywhere in the world
03:57Let me explain, my dear
03:58Most of our languages, my dear, are easy, sweet, and pleasant.
04:01Arabic and English clothing, for example
04:02Phonetic languages
04:03Phonemic Languages means Abu Hamid
04:06Try to understand that words are made up of letters.
04:08Each letter has a specific sound.
04:10Connecting the letters together forms a word.
04:11Each sound individually has no meaning in itself.
04:13What does "the voice of truth" mean? It has no meaning.
04:15But horse
04:17Four voices combine to make one sound
04:20This sound represents a meaning in our imagination
04:22The image of the horse appears in the brain
04:24That's the meaning of the word
04:25Look, it's completely different because it's a language known for being
04:28Ideas have symbols, not sounds have letters.
04:32What? Ideas have symbols, not sounds have letters.
04:37You're repeating yourself, Abu Hamid, you didn't understand the first one.
04:39Abu Hamid, try saying it in Chinese, maybe it'll sound good.
04:41Do you not understand anything, Abu Hamid?
04:42I'll make it simple for you, my dear.
04:43While the Arabic letter is like a right
04:45Baloch has a meaning on its own
04:46A Chinese symbol alone can convey a complex concept
04:48Or it describes a specific condition
04:50For example, so you understand
04:51This symbol in front of you means river
04:53Jiang
04:54This symbol, as you can see, consists of two parts.
04:56They called them radicals
04:57Not radical letters
04:58Do you know the difference?
04:59The part that looks like a capital letter on the right
05:01Symbol meaning work or occupation
05:03And the part about the drinks, those three things mean water
05:05So you have two ideas here, and they are the radicals.
05:08One hundred does equals one hundred runs
05:12So, the first thing you see when you see the word Jiang, which is this symbol
05:15You will see a job or work in the water
05:17Now, my dear, pronounce the word Jiang Di
05:19It doesn't mean that the text is pronounced with a hundred and a half, but rather that the work is pronounced with a hundred and a half.
05:23I mean, for example, the text that resembles the capital verse is this
05:25His name is Thong
05:26The three dots on the left are pronounced slightly
05:29Fadi with Di doesn't do Jiang
05:31Do you understand the idea, my friend?
05:32I'll give you another example so you understand and stick to the idea.
05:34This symbol, for example, means break
05:36It is pronounced with a sound
05:37The symbol on the left means person
05:39The symbol on the right means tree.
05:41One person plus one tree equals a break.
05:44So, my dear, when you see the word "break", what do you think about?
05:46Thinking of a person plus a tree
05:47Very mathematical language, mathematical in meaning.
05:49Every radical, my dear, has a meaning that symbolizes something.
05:52By combining more than one radical from these countries with each other
05:54You can create a new symbol like the tree with the man.
05:57They worked as a deepening ratio, a break
06:07Ghanf and Mo
06:08Oh Abu Hamid, how do these people choose their words?
06:10You're being stingy, my dear, meaning you need to memorize.
06:12The radical is in all of them, and every radical among them is a radical.
06:14And a radical jump with a radical
06:16What word and shape do they use?
06:18The Chinese mentality never sleeps
06:21And Huda says to me, "Oh Abu Hamid"
06:22So, how many languages are there in it?
06:2426 letters? They'll have them.
06:2650 Radical
06:28Oh, Grandma! Wait, Ahwa, wait!
06:30Do you know how many radicals the Chinese have, my dear?
06:32Kam Abu Hamid 26
06:3350 km?
06:3470,000 radicals
06:3670,000 radicals
06:37Let's exchange and agree with each other
06:40To create a more complex concept with yourself
06:43Wow! So what now?
06:44Each one of the radicals has a voice like theirs
06:46You should know 70,000 votes
06:48And how do they make sounds when they gather together?
06:51Learning Chinese is supposed to win a Nobel Prize.
06:52Now you know why Chinese is famous for being difficult, my dear?
06:54From the moment your paradox comes, Bing
06:56If you have a beautiful language, its idea is amazing.
06:59Compiling ideas
07:00You might have the ability to develop deeper and more insightful ideas.
07:03But this is also a very difficult language.
07:05It's very difficult for anyone to memorize and learn it.
07:07The paradox of Shigen Bing
07:08It belongs to the great language
07:10Its linguistic system is incredibly efficient.
07:12In terms of information scatter
07:13Imagine a piece of paper with "China" written on it.
07:15Thoughts and signs, how many, but from one perspective
07:18Secondly, the language is very difficult to master.
07:20Even the Chinese themselves have this principle.
07:21To master a language, you start with a few symbols.
07:23Basic concepts that are frequently repeated in speech, such as
07:25The Mayan symbol we mentioned is widely available.
07:27In words like liquids: juice, sweat
07:29One sip is enough for you to learn
07:313000 symbols from countries so that, for example, you can read
07:33Or you need one code to read me and the drinks at Pinos
07:36But if God blesses you
07:38The 8000 codes have been reached
07:39So now you're just like the Chinese death.
07:42The learner is good
07:43Do you know, my dear, how the two thousand symbol stage is going for us?
07:46When you know that the Beyh is a dish under my apple
07:48And the confusion is like a plate above two apples
07:49And to him a duck with a goose
07:50This is the stage, my dear, where we pray the takbir and walk the ahbah
07:54Of course, my dear, you are asking
07:55Why do the Chinese have seventy thousand radicals?
07:57What made their language ignite in such a strange way?
08:00Why, my dear, do we have to go back in time?
08:01Let's see where these symbols came from.
08:03According to ancient Chinese legend
08:06The Yellow Emperor who ruled China five thousand years ago
08:09He had an official historian named Kanji
08:11Kanji Deh, when he was an ordinary man
08:12Abu Hamdo, who put up with Jordi, is melting anyone.
08:14My dear, I'm not talking about someone from thousands of years ago.
08:16Not the Akinji we put in the station
08:17Kanji, the one in the picture, had four eyes.
08:19Our wearer of the cloak, no my dear, has two eyes here and two more in the illusion.
08:22The picture says that he has four eyes
08:24He sees the world through it
08:25Abu Hamad is definitely mistaken; he doesn't take any information.
08:27What does it mean that in the context of strengthening these grades, the security came as a benefit?
08:30Kanji, my dear, could see with all four eyes.
08:32The world's shapes when he raised his head upwards
08:34He used to see the shapes of the stars in the sky
08:36When he looks at the ground, he can distinguish the bird tracks.
08:38And the animal is on Earth, that's why symbols are a way of being invented.
08:41To represent the shapes around it
08:42When the emperor presented these symbols
08:44The emperor was so impressed with her that he declared
08:47These symbols are a divine gift.
08:49The legend also says that the night
08:50Out of sheer joy, the sky rained grain.
08:52And the ghosts cried all night
08:54Of course, I don't need pills, my dear, but that's just myth.
08:56I absolutely couldn't believe it
08:57What is it that makes us so beaten up?
08:59We don't know if he's a real person or not
09:01But he might be one of dozens who worked on these symbols
09:04Throughout history
09:05Now that we've delved into mythology, let's turn to science.
09:07According to linguistics, if we turn to
09:10This is of course a very old linguistic family.
09:13400 languages branched out from it
09:14Among them is China, when they compared the sounds of these languages and their grammar.
09:16And their similarities before and after they branched off from each other
09:19They found that the age of the spoken Chinese language
09:21About 4500 years
09:23Through paleontology we were able
09:25Due to the discoveries of Asar
09:26One hundred and fifty thousand discussed the material made from animal dung.
09:29These symbols include two thousand symbols
09:30Their age dates back to the Neolithic period.
09:33In various locations in China
09:34The symbols in this shape that are found on the dagger
09:36It was known as The Oracle Bone Script
09:38Script written on anger
09:41We find them in simplified forms
09:42For the true needs of the hieroglyphic script
09:44For example, take this symbol; it looks like a horse.
09:47Ghizen remains the horse of Io, for example, this symbol
09:49The fish-like creature remains the dominant fish.
09:50Buri Bolti is not a fish band
09:52The idea is that these symbols, according to these studies
09:55It is the great ancestor of modern Chinese symbols.
09:57Which will continue to evolve from this initial form
09:59To its current form, on a journey through history
10:01What I want is the last option, and we'll get a cucumber.
10:03And how many miles did the trip take?
10:12Its ancient forms and its proximity to being an abstract symbol
10:15More than just a drawing, it was a necessity.
10:17We are creating abstract writing.
10:19At that time, it was limited to fortune-telling and medicine.
10:21Recording mission events like wars
10:22But as the symbols evolved further, the Jo dynasty came into being.
10:25These symbols begin to take the form of square blocks.
10:27The current Chinese system is similar
10:29A simpler plan will emerge.
10:31And the elegance of the writing
10:32Elite activity and its use will become widespread
10:34On the keyboard, its name is SaleScript
10:36This will remain the case for a year.
10:38221 BC
10:40When Emperor Kenshi Huang arrived
10:42Hadi, tell me, Abu Hamid, who is Kenshi Huang?
10:44Your friend? No, my dear, I haven't been friends with people since before I was born.
10:47That's why he tells you, my dear, that the emperor
10:49Kenshi Huang is the unifier
10:51For China, he is our Narmer, and he is
10:52Who started building the Great Wall of China?
10:55During the unification of the country's currency
10:57And its balance will decide whether to unify
10:59The symbols and shapes of the language
11:01This will be considered the first reform process
11:03Chinese writing system
11:04Hadi tells me, "Abu Hamid, why the reform? The language is like a villa!"
11:06This man, my dear, before him, was in every region of China
11:09And in the region of China, be careful not to throw away the country's meat.
11:11Each region of the Prophet's family has its own style of writing.
11:14and tone of speech
11:15There's nothing standard, but with help
11:17His advisor, Lacey, has unified everything.
11:19Symbolic forms and radicals
11:20The one that creates symbols and generates a line
11:22The small cell script was
11:31The form of ancient Chinese characters and the beginning of a new era
11:33In its development
11:34With the unification of China, writing ceased to be an elite activity.
11:37This is the activity of the state apparatus.
11:38This new Chinese script, despite its beautiful appearance
11:40But its rules did not meet people's needs.
11:43For writing quickly, especially
11:44Long, curved lines took time
11:47Therefore, a faster method emerged.
11:49To write at the end of the reign of the Ken dynasty
11:51The name of this inscription
11:52Clerical script or in Chinese
11:54Why? What's up? Why? What's up?
11:56It means slave or prisoner because of this pattern
11:58They often invented slaves or prisoners
12:01Those who worked for the government to save
12:03Time is needed for writing because they are dealing with a large number of people.
12:04And the official rock, so with the years it became antiquated.
12:07The official way to write
12:08The state adopts it, but of course people still...
12:11If you want to type faster, two other types appeared.
12:13From the writing of Grass Crypt and Ringing
12:14This script spread during the time
12:16The Han dynasty was based on the Clarical Script
12:19But this line, as you can see, is just one line.
12:21I'm in a hurry to write, I need to finish.
12:23Typing quickly, can you see how the letters look?
12:24What's the point of these letters, my dear? Trying
12:27Chinese characters with latticework
12:28Cursif Writing appreciates people who see the history of the language
12:30Let's look at this type of writing
12:32Kovergen is simpler than Chinese.
12:35The second type that emerged to provide
12:37Faster typing speed was
12:38The running script appeared a little late.
12:40During the Han dynasty
12:41The Sinites consider running scripts to be a type of
12:44Semi-cursive script for interlaced letters
12:46It's not strong, but it's an attempt.
12:48Better for linking letters than GrassCrypt
12:50Because letters usually blend together with a light touch
12:52And a quick brush stroke with his hands
12:54A harmonious and vibrant appearance
12:55And the lines blend seamlessly with each other, of course.
12:58Some lines are simplified for speed.
13:00But overall the shape of the letters is balanced
13:02And a dream, and at the same time it's being written quickly
13:04We have reached the Han dynasty of writing
13:05Now it's no longer just for the elite or the state apparatus.
13:08Reading and writing spread among the entire population.
13:10Thanks to an invention called paper
13:11Kibbeh is easier than benbo and stone.
13:13And this, my dear, created a new need.
13:16They need a unified font, everyone.
13:18More efficient and higher-quality
13:19Because there are many people who want to learn
13:21We want to create a unified curriculum
13:22All these people know
13:23Then what is called regular script appeared.
13:25This makes writing easier and reduces pain.
13:29As you can see, simplicity, clarity, and elegance.
13:31Be aware, my dear, that people rely on this writing style.
13:33It was a powerful and important moment in China's history.
13:35The balance provided by the shape of the symbol
13:38The ease of writing it has been a tremendous transformation.
13:40In the history of Chinese writing and reading
13:43For approximately 1500 years, and the limit that remained
13:45We can still see where the roots of these symbols lie.
13:47Historical context and the connection of each pattern
13:49Those we talked about together
13:50The development of Chinese characters during
13:53Thousands of years have passed since then, as we have seen.
13:54It was about simplicity and simplification
13:56However, it still contained complex and difficult symbols.
13:59How will we behave after learning?
14:00At the end of the King dynasty
14:02A scientific trend has emerged in China
14:03A trend to explore new spaces
14:06To repair Chinese characters
14:07Using the Latin alphabet
14:10God is the one who makes the king
14:12We want to change it in Chinese.
14:13So we have to create a language and put in the effort.
14:15Thousands of years and you're still adding Latin?
14:18Why doesn't the Latin language borrow from the Chinese?
14:19Paula, and I know this could get you fired.
14:21The world is still in the heads of these people.
14:23But whoever invented this topic
14:25The Chinese leader Mao Zedong
14:27Until a governmental organization is established
14:29DD Kitted for this topic
14:30But first, before we move on to this stage
14:32We need to go back a little to the beginning of the twentieth century
14:34At that time, China was losing the Sino-Japanese War.
14:37The war showed how far behind it was technologically
14:40Of course, my dear, in order to create technology
14:42The Japanese raced
14:43You need to be well-educated
14:44However, the state of education in China was very uneven.
14:46And a large part of the Chinese didn't have
14:48Access G was originally for those who knew how to read or write.
14:51In China it was between twenty and forty percent
14:53But a small number of the population
14:55Illiteracy rates have reached some rural areas
14:58For more than ninety-five percent
14:59Where is that? So your language depends on
15:01Seventy thousand symbols, as we said
15:02This creates a barrier to your learning the language
15:05This is in addition to the inherently complex nature of Chinese characters.
15:08Which requires a lot of memorization because Chinese is not a phonetic language
15:12As I explained to you, my dear
15:13Radical sounds have no relation to symbol sounds.
15:16It means it could be radical.
15:17Hah, be Kaf, and the word is Sandub
15:19We have a dear friend in Mansour
15:20Chinese children sit down to learn to write
15:23It takes a very long time to write the letters.
15:24He sits and writes and rewrites, writes and rewrites.
15:27Until he memorizes its shape and the order of his steps
15:29After that, God willing
15:31May God make it easy for us to memorize the code.
15:33What does that even mean? And then what?
15:35God willing, we'll learn about Bitnot later.
15:37All this, my dear? What for? We're still getting to know each other.
15:39We haven't yet secured the radicals.
15:41The language still needs poetry.
15:43How can you, as a leader of Sin, eradicate illiteracy?
15:45The language system is complex like this
15:47In fact, two thinkers began in the first text
15:49From the twentieth century, they put forward ideas for simplification
15:51The language is like Jang Taian
15:53And the people in it who will put up a movement
15:55Alphabetic Phonetics
15:56Vocal movement of the word
15:58Like, my dear, there are national liberation movements
16:00There are letter liberation movements
16:01This movement, my dear, had a very wide impact
16:04This is from Benha, linguists and philosophers
16:06And many Chinese ideas
16:08Especially after the Communist Party won the civil war
16:10And Abu Hamid won, that Aziz won, from
16:12Forty-nine, and it was founded after that.
16:14People's Republic of China
16:16Led by him
16:17Those who didn't want to update the Chinese characters
16:20No, that completely cancels it.
16:22He said this clearly and explicitly to the journalist.
16:24Snow's trade in an interview in 1936
16:27He told him it was difficult to learn
16:28Chinese characters. I am Chinese.
16:30And I'm even saying that the best system
16:32The letters at the beginning do not provide people
16:34With truly effective and rich vocabulary
16:36Sooner or later it will have to
16:38We must abandon symbols
16:40The blood of the Chinese leader
16:42Perhaps you think the Chinese need changes.
16:44island and within these changes
16:46The writing system is easier and more efficient.
16:48This system aligns with his vision
16:50For the new China, even if its letters
16:52If you stand against this, then we should cancel it.
16:54We have dreams and a vision
16:56Project to replace or update the writing system
16:58The Chinese language wasn't easy and it involved
17:00Many arguments and many theories
17:02They all revolve around the same things
17:03We want to standardize the language that is written.
17:05And the words spoken in Chinese
17:07We use phonetic symbols for pronunciation so that
17:09We make learning to read and write easier
17:11And I saw the shape of those complicated letters
17:13This means it must happen under state supervision.
17:15The Association for the Correction of Letters was founded
17:17Chinese means dear, if you speak a word from it
17:19And the need that the association received more
17:21Out of 600 proposals, a few want to change.
17:24The number of lines and a few want to be converted
17:26Originally a Latin alphabet
17:27We betrayed her, and everyone is buying from each other in a different language.
17:29So, what is the biggest advantage of this topic?
17:31The situation remains the same until the association requests it.
17:33From someone named Joe, he joins him
17:34That's how it is, Hamad, the master of the tamam, congratulations on his.
17:36The truth is, my dear uncle Joe is an economist.
17:38What is this, Bahmad, that saves on letters?
17:40No, my dear economist, I mean someone who specializes in economics.
17:41And that's not all; it wasn't even in China.
17:43He was in America working as a banker on Wall Street.
17:46What, did we come here for a joke, Hamad, or what, oh God?
17:49Joe knew how to speak English well.
17:50This is a very important point because when he returned to China after the war
17:53This man joined the association and helped
17:55The Chinese are developing a system
17:57This is the latest update for the letters.
17:59Chinese and those who were mentioned in the first session
18:01For the meetings of the Chinese National People's Congress in the year
18:021958 and advanced for schools
18:05To improve literacy rates
18:07Pinyin is a writing system for Chinese.
18:09But in Latin letters
18:10Let me explain, my dear. Let me explain, my dear, if I want someone Arabic.
18:12He doesn't know English, he can't say the word "dj"
18:14It remains that he doesn't know English when he sees the word
18:16In English letters, this is from his lineage.
18:18He doesn't have anything in his head, but if you write it in Arabic letters
18:21DJ Dal and Jim
18:22These are letters he understands and can read.
18:24But it's not necessary for the health department to make a sound.
18:26We might add a little more to the letters.
18:28For example, the shaping movements, to get closer
18:30For the English voice, it remains
18:31The letter د has a damma on it, and the letter ج has a sukun on it.
18:34And we can also do the opposite, write it
18:36Literal translation from Arabic but using English letters
18:38They call it
18:40Like, for example, Franco's most famous phrase
18:42What are you doing? She's not making any noise.
18:44What's up with you?
18:46The letter 'ayn, for example, has no equivalent in English.
18:48Therefore, the need for numbers in Franco-Arabic emerged.
18:50The three are similar to the letter 'ayn'
18:52So the sentence remains: You are three times over.
18:54How are you doing? I'm telling you all this now.
18:56Why? Because Arabic and English
18:58Phonetic languages, letters alone
19:00You can make sounds
19:02The Benin system is trying to make
19:04Chinese speech has sounds
19:06By way of Latin letters
19:07This Beninese system is based primarily on ancient books.
19:10Written by European missionaries
19:12People like Matteo Ricci and Michele Ruggeri
19:14Those who arrived in China in 1583
19:16And they said the first Qumos
19:18Chinese Portuguese, this is considered the first
19:20An attempt to understand the Chinese language
19:22Through a European language
19:24These young people invented this system in the dictionary
19:26To write Chinese using the Latin alphabet
19:28Just like you write Arabic in Franco-Arabic
19:30This system has evolved over the years
19:32Through people like the English diplomat Thomas Wayne
19:34Professor of Chinese at Cambridge
19:36Herbert Giles, who relied on the system
19:38More advanced for writing Chinese
19:40In English, for example, the word "fire" is missing.
19:42The ones we talked about in the first episode can be written in letters
19:44Latin spelled like this, Gian, so you know
19:46Gian noticed the police
19:48The one with the letter "A" is like a diacritical mark, but
19:50In English, they call it that.
19:51Bya Critical Marx, so we can fix the garlic
19:53The one who writes the letter "A" and pronounces it correctly, then
19:55Gian, but the topic might be friendly.
19:58A little bit if you have a Chinese word that sounds like a scorpion
20:00For example, the word "ma" or "ma"
20:02Oh, what, what, what
20:03There are four words in Chinese, my dear.
20:06It can be written or pronounced
20:08By the mother and the verse
20:09It means "mother with" means "hashish".
20:11With means horse and
20:13It means a harsh rebuke, my dear, in the great Chinese bean dish.
20:16Muhammad Yenidi went to his mother and she got up
20:17She told him to say what
20:19So he did what she did, he hit her, that's probably the case.
20:21Because he said one of those things, he called her "hashish smoker".
20:24Oh mother of a horse, oh mother of reproach
20:25The six came to refute what does it mean?
20:27The word "mother" alone has no clear meaning.
20:30Because the Chinese language
20:31Tongle language means tonal language
20:33The tone of the words completely changes the meaning.
20:35That's why a system like Al-Bunyan was a revolutionary system.
20:38Because it's the first time he's making a pronunciation
20:40The Chinese have nothing to do with it.
20:42Using the same letters, you are connecting the words here.
20:44Written with the correct sounds via
20:46The Latin letters are large.
20:47So now, as someone who is learning, you will focus
20:50On the sounds of the first language without
20:52The concern about the seventy thousand characters remains.
20:53You can read regular English letters, can you speak Chinese?
20:56And when you remain good at the sounds system
20:58Now, you can learn the letters gradually.
21:00And indeed, the building then enters the dictionaries
21:02Language learning books and schools
21:04The children remained and learned to read and write.
21:06In a younger year, this increased the averages
21:08Reading and writing in China and the revolution it created
21:10A fact about the Chinese education system
21:12At the same time that China opened up
21:14The world has also opened up to us.
21:16China would like to say to Mr. Guo Yu Jiang
21:18The business department lost you, but education
21:20Your country has earned you
21:22One of them said to me, "Abu Hamid, surely you are now..."
21:24You're ending the episode and telling me to watch the next episode?
21:26The previous stuff and all that stuff is correct, and the music
21:28It will work and the credits will be fine
21:30No, my dear, the truth is that China was doing very well.
21:32But then something happened called the invention of the computer.
21:34This computer comes with something called a keyboard.
21:37Or, more accurately, before that, the typewriter.
21:38Now I'll tell you, my dear, that there's still a challenge.
21:40Finally, China because of the letters
21:42After the war, several years later, in the world
21:44He entered it with a new technological image
21:46Because of computers, China was still
21:48Stop in your place
21:49Hey guys, didn't we solve the dwarf of letters?
21:51What are you waiting for?
21:51Thank God we solved the problem of the letters
21:53But the letter "S" is written with seventy thousand letters.
21:55The keyboard, as explained, means
21:57I don't think he'll get that number
21:58So what's the problem, Abu Hamid?
21:59They're not writing in the Sini style anymore.
22:01In English letters
22:03They write in boys on the computer
22:05And the computer recognizes the letter "S".
22:07This will definitely be better than us bombing
22:08Qalyubia, we'll make it a keyboard
22:10By pickling seventy thousand
22:10Pickling, my dear, you're still stuck at the letter
22:12And you need to reach another letter in the alphabet.
22:14So you take public transportation
22:16and drops
22:17And cut the aviation souvenir
22:18To say exactly
22:19At this time, initially
22:20Storing the letter "S" on a computer
22:23It was a difficult thing
22:24Almost every letter needs space.
22:25It is estimated at two hundred and fifty-six houses
22:27So, look, two hundred and fifty-six times seventy thousand is how much?
22:301240 kilobytes
22:32That means 2 megabytes
22:33At this time, my dear
22:34NASA computer
22:35The previous result was 4 kilobytes.
22:37The only thing we can say in Chinese is
22:411240 kilobytes
22:42It means it will be easier.
22:431240 kilobytes
22:45Meaning, storage space at that time
22:46A very large number
22:48And a lot of money
22:49With all due respect to China and the Chinese people
22:51This is just to store the letters on the computer.
22:53We haven't written anything about them yet.
22:54Two times, my dear, even if we do a memory shake on the keyboard.
22:57How are you going to put all these letters on the keyboard?
22:59Do you, my dear, need a keyboard?
23:01At least 20 square meters
23:03Dear, you'll make her save and enjoy the space
23:05Her uncle, my dear, is a paradox.
23:06After all of China's efforts to save its script, language, and history from being lost
23:10If I don't spell out all its letters now
23:12You'll come back again, don't be late
23:13You'll know how to wait for the keyboard, but you won't know how to get a computer.
23:16This was actually one of the biggest problems that China faced in the second half of the twentieth century.
23:20The world was developing its use of computers in almost every area of life.
23:24Until the 1980s, China was calculating its population figures on paper and pen.
23:28And what do you know about the population of China?
23:30Chinese, my dear, to Global Super Power
23:32She didn't know how to use a computer until the 1980s.
23:34Apple released its first product, the Apple One, in 1976.
23:37IBM released its first modern computer in 1981.
23:42China preferred to focus and try to find solutions like manufacturing
23:46The Chinese said it was a lie, but of course its mechanism was mechanical and very complex.
23:50Of course, it is easy to think about something similar to a computer at all
23:53China's Fanchai secret computer development laboratories
23:56Secret computer development labs
23:58She was at the Chinese National Defense Research Institute
24:02How big of a big issue is it?
24:03This is a matter of national importance. Currently, in these laboratories, a professor and programmer named Wang Yongming was working.
24:09The last hero of our story
24:10Wang asked himself how he would write seventy thousand characters with approximately seventy keys only.
24:14And then an idea dawned on him.
24:16Although Chinese does not have an alphabet like other languages
24:18But that doesn't mean every letter in the language is unique.
24:21There are letter shapes that are repeated in several words.
24:24For example, the symbol for water that is repeated in every word of standing
24:27Fooang told you that we need to look for the basic and recurring elements of the Chinese language.
24:32Deh Ghul Wang, the lab was empty.
24:33Waad writes all the Chinese words on Notecards
24:36All Chinese words
24:38He had approximately 120,000 notes.
24:40If you put them on top of that, they'll make twelve meters
24:42Of course, not all the symbols for these notes are unique.
24:44There are recurring symbols for notes, as we mentioned.
24:47Not a one-time occurrence
24:48It's possible to repeat it two, three, or four times.
24:50So he started removing the repeated symbols from these notes and leaving them only once.
24:53He reassembles them, looks for more shawls, and removes them again.
24:57And so
24:57How old is he? Five years.
24:59You can then add up to 125 unique shapes.
25:03By combining them, they can produce all the words in the Chinese language.
25:07Writing in this format will be similar to writing on an old Nokia mobile phone.
25:11Each button will store a set of shapes.
25:13And when you press the key a few times, you can choose from these shapes. A brilliant idea!
25:17With this system, you can type any Chinese character with a specific set of keystrokes on a regular keyboard.
25:22And my dear, he named this invention Whobie
25:24And the UN representative is showcasing this great achievement there: moving China to a completely different place.
25:28After Wang presented his invention to the world
25:30At the 38th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York
25:33China adopted a surge in the Wube system
25:36She started working on it to fill the gap she had
25:38Between traditional writing methods and modern writing methods
25:41Because of Wang's invention, companies began using whoopi.
25:43And the students in the schools remained and learned and studied
25:45To the point where learning "whoopie" has become synonymous with learning how to use a computer.
25:49Where the speaker takes a moment to think about what happened to the keyboard
25:52The keyboard, in this form, has changed from being something you press on.
25:55Then what you clicked on will appear on the screen.
25:57Which is the concept
25:57What you see is what you get
25:59Now my blanket is something completely different.
26:00You can press any key on the keyboard.
26:03One of the characteristics of Chinese characters
26:05Of course, Souad and Wobi need to know.
26:07Remove the keys to each word
26:09How many times does Hedos have to say "here" and "here" before Jiang says this?
26:12This is a challenge
26:13You can distribute these 125 basic shapes
26:16What other method could make you type faster?
26:18For example, in a writing system built on Whoopi
26:20He writes Chinese words using numbers.
26:22That means you write 4-3-0-3
26:23The computer writes a word in Chinese.
26:25or 9-0-8-0
26:26Which is fire, for example
26:27The computer wrote this word to you the day
26:29We thank God, my dear, for our problems with our language.
26:31Where is the most we need from the role of the movers?
26:33The important thing, my dear, is that with time
26:35China has begun improving its writing system.
26:37Using the basic forms I used and
26:39And the competition began between each writing system and the other
26:42Regarding the speed of typing words on the computer
26:44Different styles of writing began to emerge
26:46Between writing numbers
26:47Writing in brown
26:48And writing with so many keys
26:49The Wybby
26:50But perhaps the most important developments that occurred after that
26:52It is the predictive text
26:54Which is what we have, my dear
26:55The auto-complete
26:56The one who is in pain
26:57It appears in Chinese before other languages.
26:59Because we need it
26:59You know, my dear, when you open Google and type what it is
27:01He completes it
27:02In Chinese it remained
27:02The computer suggests to you
27:04This is how the rest of the symbol you want to write in Chinese looks.
27:06Therefore
27:07Your typing speed is improving
27:08And your dish, my dear, we're talking about the eighties and nineties
27:10You will say important
27:10And indeed, during this period
27:12The eighties and nineties
27:13The Chinese were already working on this technology.
27:15To be faster and more accurate in writing
27:17To such an extent, my dear
27:18China still holds computer typing speed competitions.
27:22To encourage programmers to compete with each other
27:24Finding the best and easiest way to type Chinese on a computer
27:29The development of the Chinese language is a long and complex process.
27:32They share a common characteristic
27:33The need to confront challenges with innovation
27:36Each chapter in this long novel contributes to the ongoing development of the language and Chinese landscape.
27:40The Chinese could easily have replaced all the letters to solve their problems.
27:44But what if the wish is to abandon your history and culture?
27:46Innovation here becomes a necessity, not a luxury.
27:49Cultural heritage, pressure, like letters in the case of China
27:52It has been revised and edited more than once throughout history.
27:56According to the needs of the times
27:57But the essence of language is a present and existing virtue.
28:00In her unique way, she achieves communication between people.
28:02The meaning was conveyed beautifully.
28:04Capable of inspiring imagination and creativity
28:06At the end of his conversation with Trump
28:07Xi Jinping is saying Trump eloquently
28:09The Chinese
28:11The Chinese are descendants of the dragon.
28:13In Chinese culture, the dragon symbolizes the pioneering spirit.
28:16Uncompromising for the Chinese people
28:18In keeping with different eras and times
28:21God bless you, Chi Jinping
28:23Do you understand?
28:24Honestly, they want us to blow on the mutards
28:25Mohab showcases the Chinese language
28:27The ones we heard about
28:28And the second is Donald Trump
28:29We will be his helpers
28:30This, my dear, is the essence of the Chinese language.
28:32A spirit that keeps pace with its times relentlessly
28:34Without compromising its original principles
28:36That's all, my dear.
28:37Finally, Walla, finally! I hope you watch the previous episodes.
28:39Watch the upcoming episodes
28:39Tanzi looks at the sources that we need to see.
28:41Subscribe to the channel
28:41As for me, my dear, I have a few words
28:43He introduced them to them in Japanese from his childhood.
28:44Roberta Calls
28:45Batistuta
28:46Patry Kingum
28:47And of course, Corona Kiko
28:48My dear, we must always come to you with the final touch.
28:50And the love of the Japanese Netblash
28:51And in the famous word 'my dear'
28:53When you go to a Japanese person and you say something to them