- Joined
- May 12, 2017
I'm Chinese ethnicity. Unfortunately I've never met a person who could speak Chinese with an understandable accent that wasn't immersed in a Chinese community or lived in China for an amount of time. The sounds are just too different compared to other language. On the other hand, Grammer is extremely simplistic.
Funnily enough, I took a Mandarin class sponsored by the Taiwanese government during the Autumn 2023 semester. I didn't retain anywhere near as much as I thought I would, but my instructor most certainly imparted the importance of stroke order to Mandarin learning. Before I took that class, the only words I would instinctively recognise would be... obscure, to say the least.
I only fell down the Mandarin learning rabbit hole because of how much Chinese music I came acrross during late 2021 and most of 2022. Before that class, I was only really able to recall characters or words specifically relevant to the artists I listened to back then (i.e. 草東沒有派對, 劉森, and 高五人). I committed Pinyin to memory only insofar as I needed to look up songs I really enjoyed (i.e. 爛泥,愛人錯過,悲哀藏在現實中,etc). That class I took seriously extolled the "virtue," if you would, for also committing stroke order to memory.
Most of the other characters I know from memory are basic ones like 我,你,們,中國,美國,among others, but like... practising their stroke order for class is basically what got me to commit those characters to memory in the first place. Perhaps this is a foreigner thing, but stroke order can also be kinda meditative. You do the stroke order exercises in the textbooks or even Skritter enough times, you're bound to remember some things.