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  2. Tran Duc Thao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tran_Duc_Thao

    Tran-Duc-Thao and the Language of the Real Life." Language Sciences 70:45-57 [Special Issue: Karl Marx and the Language Sciences: critical encounters ed. by Peter E Jones]. Amsterdam: Elsevier 2018. D'Alonzo, Jacopo. "Tran-Duc-Thao: Consciousness & Language. Report of the Centenary Conference." Acta Structuralica - International Journal for ...

  3. Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Vietnamese_vocabulary

    Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary (Vietnamese: từ Hán Việt, Chữ Hán: 詞漢越, literally 'Chinese-Vietnamese words') is a layer of about 3,000 monosyllabic morphemes of the Vietnamese language borrowed from Literary Chinese with consistent pronunciations based on Middle Chinese. Compounds using these morphemes are used extensively in cultural ...

  4. Dictionarium Annamiticum Lusitanum et Latinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionarium_Annamiticum...

    Before Rhodes's work, traditional Vietnamese dictionaries showed the correspondences between Chinese characters and Vietnamese chữ Nôm script. [1] From the 17th century, Western missionaries started to devise a romanization system that represented the Vietnamese language to facilitate the propagation of the Christian faith, which culminated in the Dictionarium Annamiticum Lusitanum et ...

  5. Chữ Nôm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chữ_Nôm

    Chữ Nôm (𡨸喃, IPA: [t͡ɕɨ˦ˀ˥ nom˧˧]) [5] is a logographic writing system formerly used to write the Vietnamese language.It uses Chinese characters to represent Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary and some native Vietnamese words, with other words represented by new characters created using a variety of methods, including phono-semantic compounds. [6]

  6. Encyclopedic Dictionary of Vietnam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encyclopedic_Dictionary_of...

    Từ điển bách khoa Việt Nam (lit: Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Vietnam) is a state-sponsored Vietnamese-language encyclopedia that was first published in 1995. It has four volumes consisting of 40,000 entries, the final of which was published in 2005. [1] The encyclopedia was republished in 2011.

  7. Thao language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thao_language

    Thao (/ θ aʊ / thow; Thao: Thau a lalawa), also known as Sao, [2] is the nearly extinct language of the Thao people, [3] an indigenous people of Taiwan from the Sun Moon Lake region in central Taiwan. It is a Formosan language of the Austronesian family; [4] Barawbaw and Shtafari are dialects. [citation needed]

  8. Naver Papago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naver_Papago

    Papago ended its trial phase and officially launched on July 19, 2017, with translation options. It was only available as a smartphone app but it has since launched its own website and has expanded to other languages.

  9. Vietnamese name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_name

    The Vietnamese language is tonal and so are Vietnamese names. Names with the same spelling but different tones represent different meanings, which can confuse people when the diacritics are dropped, as is commonly done outside Vietnam (e.g. Đoàn ( [ɗʷà:n] ) vs Doãn ( [zʷǎ:ˀn] ), both become Doan when diacritics are omitted).