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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SinophoneSinophone - Wikipedia

    The etymology of Sinophone stems from Sino-"China; Chinese" (cf. Sinology) and -phone "speaker of a certain language" (e.g. Anglophone, Francophone).. Edward McDonald (2011) claimed the word sinophone "seems to have been coined separately and simultaneously on both sides of the Pacific" in 2005, by Geremie Barmé of Australia National University and Shu-mei Shih of UCLA.

    • Han language circle
    • 漢語圈
    • 汉语圈
  2. The etymology of Sinophone stems from Sino-"China; Chinese" (cf. Sinology) and -phone "speaker of a certain language" (e.g. Anglophone, Francophone).. Edward McDonald (2011) claimed the word sinophone "seems to have been coined separately and simultaneously on both sides of the Pacific" in 2005, by Geremie Barmé of Australia National University and Shu-mei Shih of UCLA.

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  4. Nov 8, 2012 · An alternative word coined is Chinese character cultural sphere (zh-tw: 漢字文化圏 hanzi wenhua quan ja:漢字文化圏 kanji bunkaken)." In the current version of the Wikipedia article, the term "中華文化圈" is gone, leaving only "漢字文化圏"! Too many cooks spoil the broth. Mark Hansell joined in:

  5. Sinophone literature, a term coined by Shu-mei Shih in 2004, describes (per Shih) Sinitic-language literature written “on the margins of China and Chineseness.”. As an emerging field of inquiry, the Sinophone provides a conceptual alternative to the paradigm of China-based national literary studies; as an organizing category, the Sinophone ...

  6. Sinophone minor-. pean dominance, whereas Asia, for which ity literature in China is situated at the inter-. "the sea is without significance," was limited sections between ethnicities and languages. by its land-locked status ( Lectures 196). The Mongols, Manchu, Tibetans, and many other.

  7. Word origins. Sinophone's etymology is from Sino-"China; Chinese" (cf. Sinology) and -phone "speaker of a certain language" (cf. Arabophone).. Edward McDonald (2011) claimed the word sinophone, "seems to have been coined separately and simultaneously on both sides of the Pacific" in 2005, by Geremie Barmé (Australia National University) and Shu-Mei Shih ().

  8. Mar 1, 2019 · The Sinophone. February 28, 2019 @ 10:46 pm · Filed by Victor Mair under Language and the movies, Variation. « previous post | next post ». I think about the problem of the Sinophone every day, but I haven't written about it very often on Language Log (see "Readings" below). We have Anglophone (English-speaking), Francophone (French-speaking ...

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