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Chinese WritingPale ink is stronger than the most retentive mind. Chinese is the oldest system in the world today, hardly changed in 4000 years. It is used by the world's largest nation--over a billion people. Emperor Fu-Hsi (2852-2738 B.C.) was the legendary inventor of the Chinese script. His prewriting device, called the Eight Trigrams, was a combination of straight and broken lines, apparently taken from marks on a turtle shell. This may have replaced knotted cords which were used for record keeping. About 2000 B.C., Chinese writing began as pictures. The earliest characters known (about 1400 B.C.) were on oracle bones. Some that were found still resembled the things they represented. But even then it was a full writing system, including representation of the spoken language. There are reasons why the Chinese have not adopted an alphabet.
Therefore, the logographic system, with unchanging symbols for whole words, fits Chinese well. For the Chinese, calligraphy serves as a display of a person's moral and spiritual worth. In 3000 years, different materials and uses have created a variety of styles. The following are for the word fish (yú):
Writing has traditionally been from top to bottom, the columns proceeding from right to left. But in China today the favored direction is horizontal, from left to right. Related Information
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