• Goal

    • Same as Classical Japanese Part
    • Collect knowledge that makes your life easier just by knowing it
    • Focus on understanding the critical and non-obvious differences in modern language
    • Ignore things that require grammar knowledge for understanding, and focus on learning intuitively
    • Even if you can’t fully understand it, just knowing the points where you might misread can be helpful
    • Be aware that you can supplement your knowledge in other places
  • Reading Classical Chinese like English

    • Make an effort to read it in an English-like way
  • Kanji to Know

    • Functional Words

      • 於 乎 于
        • Capture the meaning of “to, by, than, for” in a clever way
        • The following word is the complement (C)
        • Like a conjunction
        • Capture the meaning of “and, then, however” in a clever way
          • Not sure if it’s for adding or contrasting
      • Useless Words
        • 矣 焉, just for emphasis
        • 兮, just for rhythm in poetry
    • Meaning of 也

      • At the end of a sentence
        • Default: “〜也” means “〜なり。” (assertion)
        • Question: “何〜也” or “誰〜也” means “〜か” (question or rhetorical question)
      • In the middle of a sentence
        • Can be ignored
      • Particle (possessive), pronoun (this), verb (to go)
      • There are three meanings
      • Only, already, cease
      • There are three meanings and the nuances are similar
    • Other non-obvious and important ones

      • Unknown type
        • 素/固: originally
        • 夫: originally
      • Adjective
        • 少: young
      • Verbs
        • 道/首/白: say
        • 対: answer
        • 卒: pass away
        • 竟: end
        • 敢: dare
      • Nouns
        • 上: emperor
        • 相: prime minister
        • 人間(じんかん): the world
        • 左右: close aides
        • 故人: old friend
        • 知己: close friend
        • 城: town
        • 字: alias
        • 小人: unimportant person
  • Sentence Structure

    • 使/命/令: make (causative)
    • 見: be made to (passive)
    • Negation
      • 無不/非不, double negative = affirmative
      • Negation negates the one below it
        • 不常 = “not always” (negates “常”)
        • 常不 = “always different”
        • (all negation vs partial negation)
      • 無A無B
        • Meaning: “A and B indiscriminately” pattern, or “All A have B” pattern
          • If A and B are antonyms, it’s the former
      • Non-obvious negation
        • 莫し・勿し: not
        • 〜弗: not
    • Interrogative Sentences
      • Various kanji, it’s better to memorize them by practicing past questions
      • Rhetorical Questions
        • Ending with “〜ん” or “〜んや”
    • Other various sentence patterns
      • Put on hold for now, confirm while doing the exam
    • Using 以
      • Aを以てBと為す = Consider A as B
      • There are various uses, but there are no extreme meanings, so it’s best to guess based on intuition
  • Techniques

    • Recognize the structure of antithetical phrases to understand the structure
    • Gather information from various sources
  • Domain Knowledge

    • Names are often abbreviated or used with different names after the second time
    • Classical Poetry
      • Five-character/Eight-character: 5 characters/7 characters
      • Quatrain/Regulated Verse: 4 lines/8 lines
      • Rhyme is done in even lines
      • Antithetical phrases tend to be in the pattern of 3-4 phrases, 5-6 phrases (it’s important to notice)