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CJK

CJK is a collective term for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, which comprise the largest of East Asian languages. The term is used in the field of software and communications internationalization.

These languages all share the fact that their writing systems are based partly or entirely on Chinese characters -- Hanzi in Chinese, Kanji in Japanese, and Hanja in Korean. Chinese requires between 4000 characters for a basic vocabulary to 40,000 characters for reasonably complete coverage. Whereas Japanese and Korean use fewer characters -- complete literacy in Japan can be expected with 2000 characters -- idiosyncratic use of Chinese characters in proper names requires many more. This number of characters cannot fit in the 256-character code space of 8-bit encodings, and therefore requires at least a 16-bit fixed width character encoding or multi-byte variable-length encodings.

CJK character encodings should consist minimally of Han characters plus language-specific phonetic scripts such as pinyin, bopomofo, hiragana, katakana, and hangeul.

CJK character encodings include:

The CJK character sets take up the bulk of the Unicode code space. There is much controversy among experts of Chinese characters about the desirability and technical merit of the "Han unification" process used to map multiple Chinese and Japanese characters sets into a single set of unified glyphs.

The term CJKV is used to mean CJK plus Vietnamese, which used Chinese characters prior to adopting a written language solely on Romanization.

See also:

References

  • This article was originally based on material from FOLDOC, used with permission
  • DeFrancis, John. 1990. The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0824810686
  • Hannas, William. C. 1997. Asia's Orthographic Dilemma. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 082481892X (paperback); ISBN 0824818423 (hardcover)

External links

Referenced By

  | Character code | Character encoding | Character set | Charset | Chinese-language | Chinese (linguistics) | Chinese character encoding | Chinese language | Chinese written language | Codepage | Double Byte Character Set | East Asia | East Asian | Eastern Asia | Far East Asia | Han Chinese language | Han unification | I18n | Internationalisation | Internationalization | Internationalization and localization | Korean language | L10n | List of China-related topics 123-L | List of Japan-related topics 123-K | Localization of software | No-break space | Palindrome | Palindromes | Plural | Punctuation | Romanisation | Romanise | Romanization | Romanize | Script system | Simplified Chinese language | Sinitic linguistic family | South Korea/Language | Space (punctuation) | TLAs from AAA to DZZ | UNICODE | Unicode.org | Unihan | United Linux | Writing Systems | Writing system | Written Chinese

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "CJK".

 

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