5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (2024)

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (1) PIPPA MORGAN | SEPTEMBER 12, 2017

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (2)

When I tell people back home in the UK that I can speak Chinese, their responses are often something like: “Seriously? That sounds really hard, no way I’d want to learn!”

As Yangyang wrote in a recent blog post, Chinese has a reputation as a really tough language for Westerners.

But does Chinese deserve its super-difficult reputation? I’ve been learning Chinese for years (and have made lotsof mistakes along the way), and in my experience Chinese has its own set of unique challenges that make it different from learning other languages.

But, I’ve also found that Chinese isn’t as scary and confusing as it seems, and that all of these challenges can be overcome. That’s why I want to share my experiences and advice about the biggest challenges of learning Chinese in this blog post.

1. You can’t just “pick it up naturally”

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (3)

I made my first trip to China in 2010. Naïvely, I arrived with a just a dictionary and a few smartphone apps, and assumed that I could pick Chinese up through watching TV and movies, reading, and listening to the world around me. Needless to say, I returned home having learned next to nothing.

This was totally different to my experiences learning European languages (I’d lived in Colombia previously, and because Spanish is a European language and quite similar to English, I’d found I could learn a lot just through everyday life).

Because Chinese is so different from English, in the early stages there is absolutely no substitute for hard, active learning and a structured curriculum that introduces Chinese in a way that Westerners can relate to.

(Luckily, once you get more advanced in Chinese and have a big enough base vocabulary, it is possible to pick up new things naturally!).

2. Chinese is actually hundreds of different languages

Most Chinese learners (including me) learn 普通话 (pǔ tōng huà)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (4) – Mandarin Chinese (literally “common language”). But, I live in Shanghai, where the local language is 上海话 (shàng hǎi huà)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (5) – Shanghainese, not Mandarin.

Although 普通话 (pǔ tōng huà)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (6) is the national language taught in almost all Chinese schools; other cities, towns and even villages in China have their own languages or dialects.

While young and educated Chinese typically speak perfect 普通话 (pǔ tōng huà)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (7), I often have trouble speaking with people who have limited Mandarin or even just a strong local accent.

An easy way to overcome this is to write things down: luckily, the writing system is the same across all Chinese languages, so even if you can’t talk to each other, you can write.

For example, my former landlord had such a strong Shanghai accent (even when speaking Mandarin) that I really struggled to understand him. We got around this through communicating mainly by text message!

3. Chinese people aren’t used to speaking to Westerners in Chinese

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (8)

Last week, I travelled to a small city outside of Shanghai. On my way home, I called a car on 滴滴出行 (dī dī chū xíng)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (9) – China’s Uber to take me to the train station. When the driver arrived he was totally astonished and asked me repeatedly if it was me who had called him. He just couldn’t believe that a foreigner had learned the (relatively simple) Chinese required to call a car.

While the fact that relatively few foreigners have learned Mandarin means those who do win easy praise, it also brings difficulties as Chinese people are not used to speaking with non-Chinese people in their own language.

For example, if I’m speaking English with Chinese friends, I always make an effort to speak clearly and not to use too many slang words.

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (10)

But many people I meet have never spoken to a foreigner in Chinese before, so they’re not used to slowing things down and sometimes assume that because I didn’t understand one particular word I don’t understand anything at all. Let's face it: there's a difference between textbook Mandarin and how Chinese people actually speak.

I’ve found that the best way to deal with this is just to tackle anything you don’t understand head on with:这是什么意思?(zhè shì shén me yì si)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (11)– what does this mean? And, if necessary, ask your conversation partner to 说慢一点 (shuō màn yī diǎn)5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (12) – speak slowly.

4. Writing Chinese (by hand) is really, really hard

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (13)

I recently had to go to the local government offices to do some residence-permit related admin. I had been chatting easily with the official on duty, explaining my situation. He complimented me on my Chinese, and I felt pleased with myself. Then, he asked me to fill in a form.

While I could read the form without problem, and would have happily been able to type the answers on the computer, I awkwardly had to confess that I didn’t know how to write some of the necessary characters by hand, and ask him to help me fill it in.

While it’s true that Chinese characters have basic building blocks (radicals) that can make them easier to learn, there’s no way around the fact that writing Chinese is a lot harder than writing using an alphabet!

The good news is that writing using a computer or mobile phone is much, much easier. Not only that, but learning to type in Chinese actually teaches you to recognize characters, and is a big part of how Yoyo Chinese helps you memorize new characters.

Luckily, situations like my embarrassing moment with the government form don’t happen very often, and – although you’ll definitely impress people if you can write fluently by hand – learning to write by hand is just not necessary to learn Mandarin!

You can learn how to set up the Chinese keyboard input on all your devices here.

5. Lots of common Chinese words are really hard to translate into English:

I’d only been learning Chinese for a few months when a colleague asked me if I wanted to “go out to play”. “Huh? We’re not children”, I thought. “Maybe she means play with her kids?”

Actually, she wanted to go see a movie. The misunderstanding happened because the Chinese word 玩儿 (wán(r))5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (14) doesn’t translate easily into English. It can mean “to play” (like kids), but it can also mean “to hang out”, or “to have fun together” (for example going to the mall, or going for co*cktails).

Chinese has loads of words that are really hard to translate.

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (15)

This used to cause me a lot of problems because I kept trying to think in English and then translate it into Chinese. Now that my Chinese is more advanced, I find that the best thing to do is to avoid trying to translate altogether – if I’m speaking Chinese then I’m thinking in Chinese, and if I’m speaking English I’m thinking in English.

But, as a beginner, I needed a patient, English-speaking teacher who knew all about Chinese and Western culture to help me understand these nuances.

And ultimately, these unique words are one of the best parts of learning a new language. Eventually, you will naturally want to use a Chinese word -- even when speaking English -- if it more perfectly describes what you're talking about. Of course, Chinese people who have learned English do the same thing when there is a word in English for which there isn't a perfect Mandarin equivalent.

What do you think the biggest challenges of learning Chinese are? Do you have any tips to share for overcoming them? We’d love to hear from you in the comments section!

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective (2024)

FAQs

5 Biggest Challenges of Learning Chinese: a Westerner’s Perspective? ›

It Is a Tonal Language

It is complicated because intonation patterns are hard to shake off – what is used in English to emphasize parts of the sentence is used in Chinese to modify their meaning. This means that every time you use intonation in the way you are used to, your speech is going to become incomprehensible.

What are the challenges of learning Chinese? ›

It Is a Tonal Language

It is complicated because intonation patterns are hard to shake off – what is used in English to emphasize parts of the sentence is used in Chinese to modify their meaning. This means that every time you use intonation in the way you are used to, your speech is going to become incomprehensible.

What is most difficult about learning Chinese? ›

It's all about the tones!

Mandarin operates with four different tones, meaning that the way that you say a word can give it four different meanings! It is this tonality – this pronunciation – that causes most trouble for nearly all new speakers and makes Chinese a difficult language to master.

What is challenging about learning to read and write in Chinese? ›

Because the Chinese writing system isn't phonetic, mastering it takes longer and requires different strategies, most importantly you need to understand how characters work in order to learn them effectively.

How does learning Chinese affect the brain? ›

Speaking Chinese is a great exercise for the brain and thanks to research, we know Chinese requires both left and right temporal lobes of the brain to actively function. This not only improves the efficiency of the brain but also in the human being's ability to multitask.

What are 3 major problems in China? ›

  • Overview.
  • Regional imbalances.
  • Employment.
  • Government and law.
  • Crime.
  • Social unrest.
  • Discrimination.
  • Educational Pressure.

Why is Chinese education hard? ›

The ultimate philosophy of Chinese education is that you need to be good at everything. Students are bombarded with all types of subjects and have been taught them from a very young age. Since the students have to learn so much at one time, they end up memorizing rather than learning anything.

Why Chinese translations are difficult? ›

Perhaps one of the most challenging aspects of the Chinese language for translators is the differences in the grammar system as compared to other languages, such as English. For example, words do not have singular and plural forms; there is just one word for both.

How hard is it to learn Chinese on your own? ›

Learning Chinese on your own is definitely possible, but it depends on what you mean by “on my own.” If, for you, this means “without a formal teacher/tutor,” then yes, it's more difficult but still reasonable. If “learning Chinese on my own” means “without any Chinese friends,” then it's very unlikely.

What are the greatest challenges students face when learning to read? ›

Decoding Difficulties
  • trouble sounding out words and recognizing words out of context.
  • confusion between letters and the sounds they represent.
  • slow oral reading rate (reading word-by-word)
  • reading without expression.
  • ignoring punctuation while reading.

What was a major disadvantage of the Chinese writing system? ›

The Chinese writing system has certain drawbacks when compared with the simpler phonetic systems of the West. It obviously takes a great deal more time and effort to master. Many characters are extremely complex, some being made up of more than twenty-five strokes.

Why was the Chinese script so difficult to learn? ›

Chinese doesn't use an alphabet. It's a pictorial language that relies on strokes and radicals to make up individual Chinese characters that then go on to make up Chinese words. This means that you cannot just read the language after you learn the alphabet.

Why does it take so long to learn Chinese? ›

Because Chinese is one of the most difficult languages in the world, it usually takes more time to grasp the fundamentals than it would for other languages. Assuming a student is studying consistently on a daily basis and putting in quality effort, it should take around 30-50 hours to achieve a beginner level.

Is it really useful to learn Chinese? ›

Whether you're looking for a new academic pursuit, new career skills or a new perspective on life, learning Mandarin Chinese is one of the absolute best investments you can make with your free time.

Why learning Chinese is easier than you think? ›

In Chinese, there are no verb inflections at all. There are some particles that change the function of verbs, but there are certainly no long lists of verb forms you need to memorise. If you know how to say 看 (kàn) "look", you can use it for any person referring to any period of time and it will still look the same.

Which language hardest to learn? ›

Let's explore the 10 hardest languages for English speakers to learn, and the challenges they deliver:
  1. Mandarin. Mandarin is spoken by 70% of the Chinese population, and is the most spoken language in the world. ...
  2. Arabic. ...
  3. Japanese. ...
  4. Hungarian. ...
  5. Korean. ...
  6. Finnish. ...
  7. Basque. ...
  8. Navajo.
Sep 16, 2022

Is learning traditional Chinese hard? ›

Some people may claim that Simplified Chinese is easier to learn, but it is only partially true. Simplified Chinese characters contain fewer strokes and may be easier to remember for new learners. The actual effort involved in learning either traditional or simplified characters is quite similar.

Do Chinese students study hard? ›

The best of China's high-school students generally score highly in standardised tests at an international level (they took top spot in last year's Program for International Student Assessment, which tests 15-year-olds around the world in maths, reading and science, for instance).

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