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CHANGSHA, March 15 (Xinhuanet) -- China's archive
keepers said Monday that they would reveal the mysterious Nushu, probably the
world's only female specific language, to the public at an exhibition scheduled
for late April.
Nushu, a language that was incomprehensible to men, was used exclusively by women in
central Hunan province and some areas in southern China's Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region, said Liu Gening,head of the provincial archive.
The language was used widely in the three adjacent
counties of Jiangyong, Daoxian and Jianghua, but was on the verge of extinction
today for lack of use, he said. "Only elderly women in some rural areas still
use it now."
To preserve the language, Liu and his colleagues have
collectedhandkerchiefs, aprons, scarves and handbags embroidered with
Nushucharacters, manuscripts written on paper or fans, and calligraphicworks by
Zhou Shuoyi, the first man to learn the language in China.
"We have collected 303 pieces of heritage bearing the
rare language during five trips to Yongjiang county, birthplace of the female
language, over the past year," said Liu. "The oldest of them dates back to the
late Qing Dynasty in the early 1900s, and the most recent pieces were from the
1960s or 1970s."
All these pieces would be presented to visitors
during the forthcoming exhibition, he said. "We have translated all the
textsinto standard Mandarin so that the visitors would know what they are
about."
The gracefully-written rhombic Nushu characters are
structured by just four kinds of strokes, including dot, horizontal, virgule and
arc, and can be spoken in dialect to describe women's misfortunes and inner
feelings.
Nushu manuscripts are extremely rare because
according to the local custom, they were supposed to be burnt or buried with the
dead in sacrifice.
The language, which was among the first to enter the
national list of ancient cultural heritage, has aroused attention from worldwide
scholars and at least 100 manuscripts are abroad, according to the archive
keepers in the province.
Last year, Zhou Shuoyi, a 79-year-old retiree who
worked at the Cultural Bureau in Jiangyong county, compiled a dictionary of
Nushu language, after half a century of study.
The dictionary, which contains all the 1,800 ancient
charactersof the language, has complete stylistic rules and layout with
pronunciation, glossary and grammar and is arranged in international phonetic
symbol order.
Each Nushu character is followed by phonetic
notation, notes and paraphrase and a corresponding Chinese character and example
sentences. Enditem |