Tamil: 247

🇰🇭 Khmer: 74

🇳🇵 Nepali: 64

🇮🇳 Hindi: 52

🇯🇵 Japanese: 46

🇵🇰 Urdu: 36

🇦🇲 Armenian: 36

🇷🇺 Russian: 33

🇮🇷 Persian: 32

🇹🇷 Turkish: 29

🇪🇸 Spanish: 27

🇬🇧 English: 26

🇩🇪 German: 26

🇫🇷 French: 26

🇵🇹 Portuguese: 26

🇰🇷 Korean: 24

🇮🇱 Hebrew: 22

🇮🇹 Italian: 21

🇵🇬 Rotokas: 12

Note: The German alphabet consists 26 regular letters, 3 „Umlauts“ (mutated vowels: ä, ö, ü) and 1 ligation (double letter: ß - spoke as a „sharp s“).

  • LEM 1689@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 day ago

    I was watching a docu series on language, I’m sure an estimate of the number of Chinese pictographs in total was around 50000, of which several hundred were common. Literacy in 2000-3000 symbols is enough for most communication.

    • I went to school in China till 2nd grade and use Cantonese at home (like at a very basic level, I don’t have the lexicon to discuss “adult topics” like politics, science, philosophy, etc…)

      But that’s enough to understand 99% of the plot of Mandarin/Cantonese TV shows with zero subtitles. I mean, sometimes there’s new vocab, but your can figure it out with the context. I could also mute the sounds and read chinese subtitles, and still understand it that way. Read and Listen is easy, Write would be the challenging part.

      I actually don’t know exactly how many characters/syllables I could understand lol. But clearly you don’t need a lot, just grade-school level is good enough.

      I don’t think people actually remember characters especially nowadays. Its not like alphabetic languages whete you can sound it out, because the same chracter has like a different pronunciation in each different Chinese Variant (aka: “Dialect”). In the past, I read about that they used to use pen and paper to communicate because of “Dialect” differences.

      I remember like the characters for numbers and my Chinese Name, but I can’t write a basic sentence using a pen, even though I can type it using Pinyin or Jyutping (Cantonese Pinyin). Idk if my parents can still write after being in the US for over a decade.