Bear in mind that the Chinese written language is the heritage of all Chinese everywhere, regardless of nationality. It is still widely used in Malaysia and Singapore, despite the pervasiveness of English and 'Westernization'. 


Ah but you see, I can't exactly speak Malay (not fluently at least), nor fluent, spontaneous English. And my Mandarin is of 'peasant' quality - very basic day-to-day, no hard to understand characters.It's also a recipe for getting a good job in a lot of countries, with 3 languages. You lucky jerk, I've had to work for all of mine (except first).

And just why the hell should we Chinese give up our millenia-old ideograms for your convenience?
The Koreans switched to an Alphabet system and it worked fine. 99% literacy rate.
The main reason for switching, is that it would be much easier to learn.

The Koreans switched to an Alphabet system and it worked fine. 99% literacy rate.
The main reason for switching, is that it would be much easier to learn.
I would be interested in seeing that learning Chinese or Japanese (or any such East Asian text) is good for the brainI've read some reports before that learning Chinese is a good exercise for the brain - IIRC it's saying Chinese students do better in geometry than American students.![]()
.I basically fail at Chinese writing. I do better than most American students in Math and Science.I've read some reports before that learning Chinese is a good exercise for the brain - IIRC it's saying Chinese students do better in geometry than American students.![]()
Not really. I tend to speak a more 'proper' form of English. Though I can of course understand it.@KD:
Do you speak "Singlish" like those in the show "I Not Stupid"?
I've met some vendors from Singapore... while the show is extravagating, they do indeed have some very strange way of speaking English...
But the Koreans still use Chinese characters in their writing (in the south anyway. I think the Kim feudalism only allowed hangul) much like the Japanese do.
Meanwhile the locals of some neighboring countries here don't even trade with each other that much.

Just wondering in relation to the Chinese Language. Right now in my area, there is a steddy stream of Chinese living and working in the two Casinos within my area. If I was in human resources in eather of the two casinos, which Chinese should I know? Cantonese or Mandarin?
Singapore is really a splinter colony just like in MoO...And the only place where this isn't an issue is... Singapore, which is ruled by Chinese. And is the most economically successful entity in the region.![]()



All those HKTB serial dramas and HK movies. 
). Cantonese is number two, Mandarin number three.