Towa Sanyo
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The ''Towa Sanyo'' is a Chinese language
primer Primer may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Films * ''Primer'' (film), a 2004 feature film written and directed by Shane Carruth * ''Primer'' (video), a documentary about the funk band Living Colour Literature * Primer (textbook), a t ...
compiled in Japan in 1716. It attempts to render Mandarin Chinese pronunciation and colloquial style.


Contents of ''Towa Sanyo''

The ''Towa Sanyo'' is distributed in six chapters and each chapter has its individual procedure to represent the Chinese language. First three chapters introduce the compounds and phrases of characters that sorted by its meaning. The first chapter kan represented about “two-character and three-character expressions in Chinese with the proper Chinese pronunciation. The second and third chapter has three or more characters and includes set of Chinese idiomatic expressions, or Chéngyǔ (). The fourth chapter is about a talk of varying length (''jotanwa''). This chapter is mostly about fragment of conversation in various lengths. The fifth chapter groups two-character nouns in each individual topic and also includes short lyrics and folk songs. The last chapterchapter 6was added in 1718 and has two narratives. The valuable essence of these stories is that the pronunciations of Chinese characters as shown there indicates that the Chinese tone system was already established in Okajima’s time. The names of these two stories are, "Sun Ba Saves Someone and Comes into Good Fortune" (''Sun Ba jiuren defu'') and "Derong does a Good Deed and Gets His Rewards" (''Derong xingshan youbao'') (Pastreich, 45). By including these stories in the ''Towa Sanyo'', Okajima distributed the heavy tension of speaking vernacular Chinese into the Chinese literatures. The Chinese of the ''Towa Sanyo'' is mainly
Mandarin Mandarin or The Mandarin may refer to: Language * Mandarin Chinese, branch of Chinese originally spoken in northern parts of the country ** Standard Chinese or Modern Standard Mandarin, the official language of China ** Taiwanese Mandarin, Stand ...
in character. While it contains many usages from the literary language, above all the work set out to impart a colloquial style."A second look at the 'Towa Sanyo': clues to the nature of the Guanhuah studied by Japanese in the early eighteenth century"
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Function of how ''Towa Sanyo'' works with Japanese

The ''Towa Sanyo'' contains various types of colloquial forms in Chinese. These forms are constructed in pronunciation of Japanese language so that Japanese readers can easily read Chinese characters which are read in Mandarin Chinese. Once the Chinese syllable was pronounced in Japanese form, the Towa Sanyo demonstrates the simplification of Chinese colloquial form to show what the form actually meant to Japanese. For example, , which was read in Mandarin as ''xiao jiang qi lai'', was read in Japanese as , belonging in the sound gloss. Now, the Towa Sanyo uses the Japanese pronunciation to match with the Mandarin pronunciation, allowing the Japanese merchants, who frequently trade in the Jiangnan region, to study the texts of the Chinese language to pronounce Mandarin in Japanese. There was a problem, however, that gave a way to having the ''Towa Sanyo'' to create a fragment of meaning for Chinese colloquial forms. Since the Japanese could not understand Chinese colloquial meaning, the ''Towa Sanyo'' provides for the Japanese the meaning of the form in simple form. As the above colloquial form, which means “to laugh”, the Japanese simplified that colloquial form by using the Japanese verb, , meaning “to laugh.”


References

{{Reflist Phonetic guides Japanese books