Herbert Giles
Herbert Allen Giles (December 8, 1845 - February 13, 1935) was a British linguist who modified a Mandarin Chinese Romanization system established by Thomas Wade earlier, resulting in the Wade-Giles Chinese transliteration system.
Related Topics:
December 8 - 1845 - February 13 - 1935 - British - Linguist - Mandarin Chinese - Romanization - Thomas Wade - Wade-Giles - Chinese
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Giles was a diplomat to China (1867–1892) who later became the second professor of Chinese at Cambridge, succeeding Sir Thomas Wade, after living in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Related Topics:
Diplomat - China - Cambridge - Sir Thomas Wade - Aberdeen, Scotland
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His publications include:
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- Using Examples to Learn the Spoken Language (Yuxue Jiuyu) (1873)
- Using Examples to Learn the Written Language (Zixue Jiuyu) (1874)
- The 1415-page A Chinese-English Dictionary (Hua-Ying Zidian) (1892, Shanghai; 1912, London)
- containing Mandarin and nine southern dialects, such as Hakka, Cantonese, and Min
- The posthumously published, though never in English, encyclopedia, The Chinese and Their Food (Zhonghua Fanshi) (1947, Shanghai)
Postal System Pinyin is also based on the Wade-Giles system described in A Chinese-English Dictionary.
Related Topics:
Postal System Pinyin - Wade-Giles
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