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 (CRI
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| BEIJING, Oct. 20 (Xinhuanet) -- China's oldest
inheritress of the mysterious Nushu language, probably the world's only
female-specific language, died at her Central China home last month. She was in
her 90s.
Chinese linguists say the woman,
Yang Huanyi, was the last woman who possessed the most and genuine knowledge of a
400-year-old tradition in which women shared their innermost feelings with
female friends through a set of codes that were incomprehensible to men.
Yang was born in Jiangyong County, where many people
believe the language originated. She learned to read and write the language as a
little girl. Before her marriage, she used to exchange letters in Nushu with Gao
Yinxian, the eldest of the seven sworn sisters of the county who were the local
authorities on the female-only language.
Though Yang herself did not join the sworn sisters,
she did spend three years with them to learn the language, and became its only
surviving inheritress at the end of the 1990s, after all the seven sisters had
passed away.
Since then she had been dubbed a "living fossil of
the women-specific language" by linguists.
Until her death on September 20, it remained a
mystery as to how old Yang was. During an interview with Xinhua in the summer of
2002, she said she was 94. Authorities in her hometown, however, said she was 98
when she died. Zhao Liming, a specialist with Tsinghua University, said Yang was
born in 1909.
It is often hard to tell the actual age of elderly
Chinese people because many are accustomed to giving their "nominal age," which
is one to two years ahead of the actual age. A baby's "nominal age" is
considered to be one at birth and becomes two at the beginning of the very next
year.
Yang was invited to Beijing in 1995 to attend the
United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women. The letters, poems and prose
she wrote were collected and compiled by linguists of the Beijing-based Tsinghua
University in a book that was published earlier this year.
Linguists are trying hard to learn the language and
experts say Yang's writing was more standard, original and unaffected by
Putonghua, or standard Chinese or Han language, in which she was totally
illiterate.
None of Yang's children or grand-children inherited
her proficiency in the unique language. The gracefully-written rhombic Nushu
characters are structured by just four kinds of strokes, including dot,
horizontal, virgule and arc, and can be spoken to describe women's misfortunes
and inner feelings.
Some experts presume that the language is related to
Jiaguwen - the inscriptions on animal bones and tortoise shells of the Yin Ruins
from more than 3,000 years ago - but no conclusions have been drawn as to when
the language originated.
Besides Hunan Province, the language was also used in
some areas of southern China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Nushu
manuscripts are extremely rare because, according to local custom, they were
supposed to be burnt or buried with the dear departed in sacrifice.
The language, among the first to enter the national
list of China's ancient cultural heritage, has aroused keen interest in
worldwide scholars. At least 100 surviving manuscripts are abroad, according to
archive keepers in Hunan Province.
China has stepped up preservation of the language
since the 1990s amid assiduous efforts to better protect the country's
traditional culture in an increasingly globalized society.
The Hunan provincial archives have collected
handkerchiefs, aprons, scarves and handbags embroidered with Nushu characters,
manuscripts written on paper or fans, and calligraphic works.
"We have collected 303 artifacts bearing the rare
language during five trips to Yongjiang County, birthplace of the female
language, over the past year," said Liu Gening, head of the provincial archives.
"The oldest of them dates back to the late Qing Dynasty in the early 1900s, and
the most recent pieces are from the 1960s or 1970s."
Among their collections are calligraphic works by
Zhou Shuoyi, a retiree in Jiangyong County who is believed to be the first man
to learn the language in China. Zhou, after half a century of study, compiled a
Nushu dictionary last year at the age of 79.
The dictionary, which contains all the 1,800 ancient
characters of the language, has complete stylistic rules, a layout with
pronunciation, a glossary, and grammar is arranged in international phonetic
symbol order. Each Nushu character is followed by a phonetic description, notes,
a corresponding Chinese character and example sentences.
(China Daily)
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