Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Many experts in China call for the restoration of traditional Chinese characters. What are the advantages of traditional Chinese characters over simplified Chinese characters?

Many experts in China call for the restoration of traditional Chinese characters. What are the advantages of traditional Chinese characters over simplified Chinese characters?

Hello, I have the following views on this issue. I hope I can help you. A proverb is used by lovers of traditional Chinese characters to spit out simplified Chinese characters: love is unintentional, the body has no bones, and the turtle has no feet. Meaning: Traditional Chinese characters are good. Simplified Chinese characters are not good, not to mention those who call simplified Chinese characters residual Chinese characters think that traditional Chinese characters are superior. A similar topic was argued nearly a hundred years ago. As early as 1920, just after the May 4th Movement, China thought was in full bloom, and Qian Fan was competing with each other, so you can sing and I will appear.

1. As far as writing is concerned

Traditional Chinese characters are easier to write beautifully, because there are fewer gaps between strokes, so the layout can be square, without too careful planning, and the structure can be very straight and not too fragmented; On the contrary, there are a lot of blanks between the strokes of simplified Chinese characters, which makes typesetting very difficult. This is also a point that I spent a lot of time practicing Chinese characters when I was a child. I have tried many different spaces, and it is difficult to write some words with few strokes square and beautiful. If I'm not careful, it's easy to scatter and dump.

2. As far as printing is concerned.

Traditional Chinese characters give people a full and realistic feeling, and sometimes they always feel crowded, so some people upstairs say they are tired of reading them. With fewer spaces, the gap between each word is not too big. Except for some particularly simple words, many cases are similar. Inappropriately speaking, they look like neat parallel prose. Of course they are beautiful (I think Chinese characters are the most beautiful words in the world), but they are a little tired. Compared with traditional Chinese characters, simplified Chinese characters are more different from each other because of blank space, not because of the great difference in the structure of words, but because the way of blank space has changed greatly after a period of time. You can feel it by simply scanning the traditional answers and simplified answers upstairs.

Mr. Qian, a linguist, advocated simplified Chinese characters in New Youth-at that time, the idea was surging, but it didn't seem radical at all: at that time, people were chanting that China people should use pinyin Chinese characters. Generally speaking, my feeling is that traditional Chinese characters are like Mulan or Guanju in appearance, while simplified Chinese characters are like Taohuayuan or Zuiweng Pavilion. Each has its own beauty. From this style, I personally prefer simplified Chinese characters.