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Date:      12 Jun 1998 16:12:39 +0900
From:      CHOI Junho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
To:        Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
Cc:        Jun-ichiro itojun Itoh <itojun@iijlab.net>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: internationalization
Message-ID:  <wk90n3855k.fsf@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
In-Reply-To: Chen Hsiung Chan's message of Fri, 12 Jun 1998 12:42:45 %2B0800
References:  <199806120309.UAA11238@usr09.primenet.com> <2754.897624427@coconut.itojun.org> <19980612124245.33715@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>

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Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw> writes:

> On Fri, Jun 12, 1998 at 01:07:07PM +0900, Jun-ichiro itojun Itoh wrote:
> [deleted]
> > >The point is not a reduction in an alphabetic symbol space, as in
> > >your A-F example.
> > >A switch from Kanji to Kana would not damage the ability to represent
> > >any Japanese words; it's a switch from an ideogrammatic to an
> > >alphabetic representation.
> > 
> > 	bzzzz, you are wrong.  We Japnaese can't live without Kanji.
> > 	Kanji is not an extra character sets.  Kanji is mandatory
> > 	character set for us, just like G-Z for you.  Believe me,
> > 	I speak and write Japanese every day :-)
> 
>     That's also true for Chinese. We can not live with only
>     phonetic symbols, whether that be bopomofo or pinyin or
>     anything else.

That's also true for Korean. :)
We are somehow different from Japanese and Chinese, because generally
we are using almost only Hangul glyphs in Computers(usually chatting,
mail, short articles not serious). But Hanja - aka Kanji in Japanese -
is used widely for Office, Newspapers, Books, formal articles, etc. We
learned Hanja in middle and high school.

CJK people can't live without Hanja|Kanji|Hanzi :)

-- 
 ----Cool FreeBSD!----MSX Forever!---J.U.N.K.E.R/Beat Snatchers!----
  CHOI Junho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>  http://jazz.snu.ac.kr/~junker
 Distributed Computing System Lab,CS Dept.,Seoul National Univ., ROK

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