What do you think about the South Korean people s demand for South Korea to restore Chinese characte

Updated on international 2024-06-05
21 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Korean belongs to the Altaic language family, or independent language family, which has its own grammar and system. For a long time in history, the Korean nation did not have its own written language, and local books, classics, and official documents were all written in Chinese characters, and the use of Chinese characters even became a privilege of scholars and nobles. In the 17th century, during the reign of the Joseon king, Chaosejong Yi Yu, he founded the "Hunmin Jeongyin", and the Korean nation also had its own written script, Hangul.

    This kind of writing is a kind of pinyin script, which is easy to grasp, and plays an important role in improving the literacy rate and popularizing cultural knowledge, even if people who have not gone to school, as long as they master the Hangul pinyin, they can generally read and understand the basic articles and logos. This plays an important role in improving literacy and popularizing cultural knowledge. <>

    However, because the proverb itself is a pinyin script, there is also a relatively obvious drawback, that is, one tone will express multiple meanings. Many Korean place names, personal names, legal and other words are derived from Chinese. Due to the policy of removing Chinese characters for many years before South Korea, many Chinese characters are only given in Hangul characters that imitate the pronunciation of Chinese characters, which will cause a lot of inconvenience.

    Korean students can't learn Chinese in school, so they have to tutor Chinese characters privately in order to study. This is the reason why many Koreans, especially intellectuals, want to resume the teaching of Chinese characters. <>

    The argument about the revival of Chinese characters is divided into two schools in Korea:

    Some of them are intellectuals and cultural figures mentioned above, and there are also some more open-minded people who support the resumption of Chinese character education.

    On the other hand, the ultra-nationalists in South Korea boycott Chinese characters and believe that they will not resume Chinese character education, because they see Chinese characters as a cultural invasion left over from history.

    From my personal point of view, of course, I support the former, not from the point of view of national politics, but out of respect for history and culture. A country has its own history and culture, and the written word itself is an important tool carrier to inherit these histories and cultures, and the written word itself is also a part of the history and culture. The long-term use of Chinese characters in the history of the peninsula can be said to be completely integrated into the history and culture of Korea, and in this case, relying on administrative orders to forcibly remove Chinese characters will create a cultural disconnection.

    Not only that, but it will also affect all aspects of society. It is inconvenient to use legal documents and ** documents due to the lack of Chinese characters, after all, the meaning of these words is very abstract, and the meaning is very rigorous. Even in daily life, there will be a lot of jokes, and you have to explain it, which will be much less efficient.

    In the 80s of the last century, after the generation of Korean de-Chinese characters has been formed, problems have also arisen, so at the end of the 90s, South Korea's ** Kim Dae-jung issued a manifesto for the restoration of Chinese characters, but conservatives are very resistant to this, they believe that this Chinese character can be studied through electives and extracurricular studies, and should not be added to the compulsory curriculum. Therefore, although the labeling of Chinese characters has been restored in Korean place names and writings, Chinese character education has not been restored at the educational stage.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    <> Chinese culture is based on a history of 5,000 years, and many foreigners have integrated into Chinese culture by learning Chinese. Although English is the most widely spoken language in the world, Chinese, as the most spoken language in the world, has a history dating back more than 4,000 years to the creation of Cangjie characters. In ancient times, the ancients used words to record history, so that China's culture has been inherited, and many surrounding countries began to follow suit, so Chinese characters were spread.

    In ancient times, some countries such as Japan and South Korea did not have their own national script, but due to the political exchanges between the two countries, people who frequently traveled to China have learned Chinese characters, so many of their ancient books and historical books are recorded in the text of Chinese characters, but with the progress of the times, the surrounding small countries have also begun to develop towards the better side, they are not willing to follow the example of our country's writing, so they rectify the text according to their own national conditions, although it is still based on Chinese characters, but it is also a kind of progress. Nowadays, Koreans have abolished the study of Chinese characters for nearly 100 years, but they have recently picked it up again, what is going on?

    In fact, South Korea's resumption of the study of Chinese characters is only an inevitable result of historical promotion. You must know that South Korea did not have a written language before, and only learned Chinese characters after the mission to China, and most of the country's history books were recorded through Chinese characters, and as soon as Chinese characters stopped, many Koreans in the new century did not know the words in their ancient books and history books, and did not understand the history of their own country, which naturally affected the inheritance of culture, and naturally had to return to the course of learning Chinese characters.

    Secondly, the history of Hangul in Korea has not been created for a long time, and the pronunciation is limited, there are many homophones, and there are large differences in the dialects of residents in different regions of Korea, so it is very inconvenient to express the difference in pronunciation alone. The history of their native script from its formation to its use is only a few hundred years, and there are factors such as Japan's war of aggression in between, so many terms such as medicine, science and technology, and military cannot be clearly expressed.

    It is said that during the artillery battle on Yeonpyeong Island, the South Koreans printed Chinese slogans such as "Wait for the enemy and carve the bones of Yeonpyeong" on the fighter planes in order to boost morale, but because the general cultural level of the South Korean soldiers at that time was not high, and they did not know a few Chinese characters, this inspiring slogan was just a slogan. With the development of the times, more and more Korean citizens are demanding that the study of Chinese characters resume and officially use Chinese characters, in order to emphasize the importance of Chinese characters. Nowadays, Koreans use Chinese characters to mark their Chinese names on their ID cards, and if they don't learn Chinese characters, I am afraid that it is really the most illiterate country in this century!

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    I think China is very powerful and has more influence in the world, which is why the Korean people are demanding the restoration of Chinese characters.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    I think this request is reasonable, after all, China is getting stronger and stronger, and Chinese characters are the language of communication with Chinese, and there is nothing wrong with learning Chinese characters.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Only a handful of people in South Korea have proposed a return to the use of Chinese characters, so please don't make a fuss about it.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    China should collect its patent fees, and it should be noted in layman's language that it is a stick, so as not to reflect the decline of China!

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The sooner a country recovers its man, the sooner it will get out of the sea of scientific suffering. In Han culture, there is the only way to solve the increasingly serious scientific disaster in front of them.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    People have even changed the name of the capital, they will learn your Chinese characters, don't dream. And Vietnam, look at us as much as we look at Japan, feud.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    What kind of writing and language is used in South Korea, that's Korea's own business, and what do you do?

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Will you use Chinese characters to apply for the World Heritage again?

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Don't look at them, let them go!

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Resolutely can't spoil Chinese characters for the stick country!

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    It doesn't matter to us whether we recover or not......

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Are you here to steal our Chinese character culture? It's really funny, what Chinese is suddenly learned at this time, so I have a feeling that a weasel greets the chicken, and I don't have a good heart.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    In 1948, when the Korean Peninsula abolished Chinese characters, the Korean Peninsula began to replace Chinese characters with Korean characters.

    After the Korean nation gained independence around 1945, under the influence of the national ideology of getting rid of the Japanese colonial influence, in order to get rid of the imprint of Chinese cultural influence, the use of Chinese characters was abolished, and Korean proverbs were used to mark the streets and alleys of Korea, and the official text could only be used to remember things, and Chinese characters were not allowed to be taught in elementary and junior high school courses, and Chinese characters were not listed as elective courses Chinese with French, German, and Spanish in high school.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    The abolition of Hangul in Korean was a decision that caused some controversy and opposition at the time, but has now become a linguistic and cultural feature of South Korea. The abolition of the use of Hangul in Chinese characters has had a profound impact on South Korea, which is manifested in the following ways:

    Promote the development and standardization of the Korean Chinese language. Abolishing the use of Hangul in Chinese characters makes Korean more concise, easy to learn, and easy to use, and also contributes to the standardization and standardization of the Korean language, improving the versatility and international status of the Korean language.

    Deepen the differences between Korean and Chungqiao Chan cultures. After the abolition of Chinese characters in South Korea, Koreans used Hangul more than Chinese characters, which led to some differences between Korean culture and Chinese culture, which are reflected in vocabulary, grammar, phonetics, etc.

    Influencing the cultural identity and cultural self-confidence of Koreans. Abolishing Hanja and using Hangeul can make Koreans more confident and proud because they have their own language and culture instead of relying solely on Chinese culture and Hanja.

    Influence Korea's exchanges and cooperation with other countries. As a result of the abolition of the use of Hangul in Chinese characters, communication and cooperation between Korea and other countries have become smoother and more convenient, as Koreans can communicate and exchange with foreigners more freely in their own language.

    In short, the abolition of Chinese characters and the use of Hangul has had a profound impact on South Korea, making Koreans more confident, culturally identious and proud, and also deepening the cultural differences between Korea and China, while also contributing to exchanges and cooperation between Korea and other countries.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    <>Although it has been many years since the abolition of Chinese characters in South Korea, many aspects of South Korea have been greatly affected since the abolition of Chinese characters, and Koreans have realized that they can't do without Chinese characters at all.

    Hangul in Korea itself.

    It is a kind of pinyin script, which can only be understood by phonetics, and nearly eighty percent of the words in Korean are from Chinese, and it is easy to cause ambiguity if it is only expressed in Korean pinyin.

    For example, there are many different words, but their pronunciation is the same, and you will not be able to understand it when you write it in Korean, which is the same reason as when you wanted to pinyin Chinese characters in the past.

    Our country began with the intangible cultural heritage of humanity.

    There was not much distraction, so South Korea took the opportunity to rob, preemptively applied for the World Heritage Site, and printed all kinds of traditional Chinese culture on fire kang and woodcuts.

    All of them are named after them. Therefore, South Korea is very repulsive to China as the source of culture, and the de-sinicization movement is imperative.

    To tell the truth, Hangeul is the language used by Korean nobles to fool the common people, and it has been the case since ancient times. Most of the elites know Chinese characters, but they don't let the common people know them. If the common people read too much, will the Korean aristocracy still be able to sit firmly?

    After the abolition of Chinese characters and the use of Hangul in South Korea, it also caused a lot of inconvenience to itself. Such as in South Korea, the ID card of a Korean person.

    The name on the book should be remarked with Chinese names, the name of the book should also be in Chinese characters, the name of the company, the name of the school, the name of the personal business card, the door couplet, the inscription, etc., all need to use Chinese characters. Therefore, in today's Korea, Chinese characters have been abolished, but they are still forced to be used.

    However, the place where the Olympics were held at that time is now nowhere to be found on the map of South Korea. This place is called Seoul.

    Seoul because of the Han River.

    Named after it, the Han River is also one of the major rivers in Korea. Why is there no trace of Seoul?

    Because in 2005, South Korea's ** and the people, with a resolute attitude, carried out a "Seoul" renaming movement.

    The economic leap has made South Korea, which is intertwined with inferiority and self-esteem, further determined to de-sinicize.

    , even Seoul, the capital of South Korea, was changed to Seoul.

    But it is interesting to note that under such a determined move by South Korea to remove China's historical influence, South Koreans still have Chinese characters on their ID cards.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    ⊙o⊙)…It's simple. After the Chinese characters were transmitted to the peninsula, they were used by the people of the peninsula, and the Chinese characters currently used are Korean kanji, Japanese kanji, and Chinese kanji. The writing is similar, but the pronunciation and meaning are different.

    Therefore, it is not surprising that Korea uses Chinese characters, but now Korean Chinese character education is not popular, so most Koreans do not understand Chinese characters, but a few people still use them.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Because Chinese characters are very similar to Korean Chinese characters, it can be said that they have the same root and origin, and Chinese characters are more simple than Korean.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Although Chinese characters have been abolished in Korea, these Koreans have found that the absence of Chinese characters has a great impact on their lives, so they continue to use Chinese characters.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Because in the past, Koreans actually learned Chinese characters, and now they print Chinese characters on their ID cards, which they don't use in daily life, but sometimes they use them.

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