Concept information
Preferred term
Literary Chinese
Definition
- Classical Chinese or Literary Chinese is the language in which the classics of Chinese literature were written, from c. the 5th century BC. For millennia thereafter, the written Chinese used in these works was imitated and iterated upon by scholars in a form now called Literary Chinese, which was used for almost all formal writing in China until the early 20th century. Each written character corresponds to a single spoken syllable, and almost always to a single independent word. As a result, the characteristic style of the language is comparatively terse.
Broader concept
Entry terms
- Classical Chinese
Identifier
- LZH
Notation
- lzh
In other languages
-
литературен китайски
Bulgarian
-
književni kineski
Croatian
-
literární čínština
Czech
-
litterær kinesisk
Danish
-
Klassiek Chinees
Dutch
-
klassikaline hiina
Estonian
-
klassinen kiina
Finnish
-
chinois littéraire
French
-
klassisches Chinesisch
German
-
Λόγια κινεζικά
Greek
-
irodalmi kínai
Hungarian
-
Sínis Liteartha
Irish
-
cinese letterario
Italian
-
ķīniešu literārā valoda
Latvian
-
wényán
Literary Chinese
-
文言
-
klasikinė kinų
Lithuanian
-
Ċiniż Letterarju
Maltese
-
literacki chiński
Polish
-
chinês literário
Portuguese
-
chineză literară
Romanian
-
literárna čínština
Slovak
-
knjižna kitajščina
Slovenian
-
chino literario
Spanish
-
klassisk kinesiska
Swedish
URI
http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/language/LZH
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