Learn Mandarin: How to Express Health Issues in Chinese
Posted 1 year 4 months ago by National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University (NYCU)
Develop your Mandarin language skills
This three-week course will help you gain intermediate Mandarin Chinese language skills to effectively communicate health issues.
Designed for learners who have already achieved level 1 according to the “Test of Chinese as a Foreign Language (TOCFL)†specification, this course will focus on discussing a variety of health topics in Chinese.
With this knowledge, you’ll be able to confidently communicate and navigate daily life in Taiwan.
Learn essential Chinese grammar and vocabulary
You’ll follow step-by-step content, interactive videos, and real-life examples designed by language experts to help you master Mandarin Chinese.
Through this exploration, you’ll learn the key grammar and vocabulary you’ll need to discuss different health issues in a variety of contexts.
Take your Chinese Mandarin skills to the next level
On the course, you’ll learn essential Chinese Mandarin to help you describe simple health symptoms and go to the pharmacy to buy medicine.
You’ll also learn how to discuss the importance of health as well as wider issues such as environmental pollution.
Learn from the experts at National Chiao Tung University
Throughout the course, you’ll be guided by the language specialists at National Chiao Tung University.
With their expertise, you’ll finish the course with the knowledge and confidence to discuss health issues in Mandarin Chinese.
This course is designed for learners who have already achieved level 1 of the “Test of Chinese as a Foreign Language (TOCFL)â€, which is equivalent to CEFR-A1.
Learners at this level will have spent 120-240 course hours in Chinese speaking areas and 240-480 course hours in non-Chinese speaking areas and they possess basic grammar and about 500 high-frequency vocabulary.
This course is designed for learners who have already achieved level 1 of the “Test of Chinese as a Foreign Language (TOCFL)â€, which is equivalent to CEFR-A1.
Learners at this level will have spent 120-240 course hours in Chinese speaking areas and 240-480 course hours in non-Chinese speaking areas and they possess basic grammar and about 500 high-frequency vocabulary.
- Describe some simple symptoms
- Go to the pharmacy to buy medicine
- Discuss the importance of health
- Talk about environmental pollution
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