Atlas of the Chinese empire [microform] : containing separate maps of the eighteen provinces of China proper on the scale of 1:3,000,000 and of the four great dependencies on the scale of 1:7,500,000 together with an index to all the names on the maps and a list of all Protestant missions stations, &c. ;
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Atlas of the Chinese empire [microform] : containing separate maps of the eighteen provinces of China proper on the scale of 1:3,000,000 and of the four great dependencies on the scale of 1:7,500,000 together with an index to all the names on the maps and a list of all Protestant missions stations, &c. ;
- Publication date
- 1908
- Topics
- China -- Maps
- Publisher
- London ; Philadelphia : China Inland Mission ; Morgan & Scott
- Collection
- Princeton; microfilm; additional_collections
- Contributor
- Princeton Theological Seminary Library
- Language
- English
Microfilm
- Addeddate
- 2009-02-02 15:35:37
- Associated-names
- China Inland Mission
- Call number
- 418672
- External-identifier
- urn:oclc:record:1051744135
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Identifier
- pts_atlasofchineseem_3721-1239
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t4jm2k84c
- Isbn
- 0524102392
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.37
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.21
- Openlibrary_edition
- OL23367722M
- Openlibrary_work
- OL11942640W
- Page_number_confidence
- 19
- Page_number_module_version
- 1.0.3
- Pages
- 74
- Possible copyright status
- NOT_IN_COPYRIGHT
- Ppi
- 300
- Scandate
- 20090130200155
- Scanfactors
- 0
- Scanner
- microfilm01.rich.archive.org
- Scanningcenter
- rich
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
comment
Reviews
Reviewer:
chinesestudies
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February 22, 2013
Subject: Atlas of Chinese geography; Chinese
Classical or Literary Chinese (also known as Wenli or Wen-li) is still very relevant to the Chinese speaking world today. Literary Chinese is the form of written Chinese used from the end of the Han Dynasty (206 BC) all the way until today. Literary Chinese is also known as Wen-li, wen-li or wenli. In China PRC Most Chinese people with at least a middle school education are able to read basic Classical or Literary Chinese, because the ability to read (but not write) Classical Chinese is still part of the Chinese middle school and high school curricula ;. and is part of the college entrance examination. Classical Chinese is taught primarily by presenting a classical Chinese work and including a vernacular gloss that explains the meaning of phrases. Tests on classical Chinese usually ask the student to express the meaning of a paragraph in vernacular Chinese, using multiple choice. They often take the form of comprehension questions. In addition Literary Chinese is still used by many Chinese who live outside of china. Taken together, that one group of Chinese outside of china would form the fifth largest population group in the world, if classed by themselves.
Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, in the Chinese literary language, plain style (1902) by Schereschewsky ;. 1875 Chinese Mandarin Easy Wenli [Chinois ] Old Testament by Schereschewsky ;. New Testament, in plain Wenli (1898) by Schereschewsky ;. Xin yue quan shu, Zhong xi zi - English and Mandarin Chinese (1880) ; . New Testament ;. CANTONESE - New Testament in English and Canton colloquial (1908) ;.
Version in Azerbaijan Azeri Central Asia ;. Thai – ( Siamese );. Burma - Burmese ;. TAMIL ;. Persian IRAN Farsi ;.
Hindustani – ( HINDI) . Marathi . Arabic .
Lessons in elementary Wenli = Hua wen shi yi ;.
An analytical Chinese-English dictionary ;.
English - Chinese pocket dictionary - Mandarin dialect ;.
Analysis of Chinese characters ;.
-
Subject: Atlas of Chinese geography; Chinese
Classical or Literary Chinese (also known as Wenli or Wen-li) is still very relevant to the Chinese speaking world today. Literary Chinese is the form of written Chinese used from the end of the Han Dynasty (206 BC) all the way until today. Literary Chinese is also known as Wen-li, wen-li or wenli. In China PRC Most Chinese people with at least a middle school education are able to read basic Classical or Literary Chinese, because the ability to read (but not write) Classical Chinese is still part of the Chinese middle school and high school curricula ;. and is part of the college entrance examination. Classical Chinese is taught primarily by presenting a classical Chinese work and including a vernacular gloss that explains the meaning of phrases. Tests on classical Chinese usually ask the student to express the meaning of a paragraph in vernacular Chinese, using multiple choice. They often take the form of comprehension questions. In addition Literary Chinese is still used by many Chinese who live outside of china. Taken together, that one group of Chinese outside of china would form the fifth largest population group in the world, if classed by themselves.
Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, in the Chinese literary language, plain style (1902) by Schereschewsky ;. 1875 Chinese Mandarin Easy Wenli [Chinois ] Old Testament by Schereschewsky ;. New Testament, in plain Wenli (1898) by Schereschewsky ;. Xin yue quan shu, Zhong xi zi - English and Mandarin Chinese (1880) ; . New Testament ;. CANTONESE - New Testament in English and Canton colloquial (1908) ;.
Version in Azerbaijan Azeri Central Asia ;. Thai – ( Siamese );. Burma - Burmese ;. TAMIL ;. Persian IRAN Farsi ;.
Hindustani – ( HINDI) . Marathi . Arabic .
Lessons in elementary Wenli = Hua wen shi yi ;.
An analytical Chinese-English dictionary ;.
English - Chinese pocket dictionary - Mandarin dialect ;.
Analysis of Chinese characters ;.
-
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