Pages that link to "Literary and colloquial readings of Chinese characters"
The following pages link to Literary and colloquial readings of Chinese characters:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Chinese input methods for computers (← links)
- Li Bai (← links)
- Kanji (← links)
- Taiwanese Hokkien (← links)
- Classical Chinese (← links)
- Homograph (← links)
- Gender-specific and gender-neutral pronouns (← links)
- Nüshu script (← links)
- Hanja (← links)
- Min Chinese (← links)
- List of kanji by stroke count (← links)
- Radical (Chinese characters) (← links)
- Traditional Chinese characters (← links)
- Regular script (← links)
- Chinese characters of Empress Wu (← links)
- Small Seal Script (← links)
- Chinese bronze inscriptions (← links)
- Variant Chinese character (← links)
- Template:Chinese characters sidebar (← links)
- Man'yōgana (← links)
- Ming (typefaces) (← links)
- Singapore Chinese characters (← links)
- Hyangchal (← links)
- Gugyeol (← links)
- Idu script (← links)
- Cangjie (← links)
- Shinjitai (← links)
- Ryakuji (← links)
- Tōyō kanji (← links)
- Jōyō kanji (← links)
- Four tones (Chinese) (← links)
- Kyūjitai (← links)
- Second round of simplified Chinese characters (← links)
- Book of Han (← links)
- Singaporean Hokkien (← links)
- Sichuanese Mandarin (← links)
- Chinese character classification (← links)
- Fuqing dialect (← links)
- List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese (← links)
- Large Seal Script (← links)
- Standard Form of National Characters (← links)
- List of Graphemes of Commonly-Used Chinese Characters (← links)
- Semi-cursive script (← links)
- Chinese Character Simplification Scheme (← links)
- Neolithic signs in China (← links)
- Cursive script (East Asia) (← links)
- Written Hokkien (← links)
- Proto-Min language (← links)
- Tamsui District (← links)
- Clerical script (← links)