Originally posted by jean
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As for English and other European languages, because there was Latin for the purpose of intellectual writing, vernacular written form didn’t develop until much later, and when it did develop, it was, to begin with, largely for ‘women and children’ and less educated. This is why, I think, in these languages, written form is not so distinct from its spoken form.
Originally Posted by jean
A good deal of the prose literature that survives from the classical period consists of speeches. This fact in itself brings spoken and written versions of the language closer together, doesn't it? Many of the people crowded around in a corona in the forum to hear the great man orate were probably illiterate themselves, but are we to assume that they spoke a totally different variety from what they heard and, presumably, understood?
As for Chinese, I think the very early form of Chinese writing was a visual form and did not have the vocal equivalent. But it was language and not pictures. No, this is definitely nothing to do with different versions of modern Chinese.
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