• CliffordBigRedDog [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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      18 days ago

      Only a small number of chinese characters (usually ones like these that signify basic things and concepts) are ideographs or Pictographs

      Most Chinese characters are phono-semantic compounds, which are kinda a bit of a mix between phonographs and ideographs

        • KuroXppi [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          18 days ago

          Most Chinese characters are phono-semantic compounds, which are kinda a bit of a mix between phonographs and ideographs

          This is a good thing. The pictographic basic characters tend to have the pronunciation you learn by rote, but then they become the components of the the phono-semantic characters.

          With the phonosemantic characters one side tells you the rough pronunciation, the other side gives you a ballpark e.g. 火 is fire (imagine a burning campfires) 包 is pronounced bao and then if you add 火 fire to 包 you get pao meaning cannon. If you add the bamboo radical over 同 tong you get tong meaning a barrel. So 炮筒 paotong means the barrel of a cannon.

          Many Chinese words are made up of two characters, so by context you can have a decent guess what they mean.