Download Language Freeware

Byki Free Language Software Downloads Logo

Byki is free software for learning over 70 languages. It's available for all the most popular languages as well as many minority and less-taught languages. Try it now!

You Make Language Happen

Free Language Newsletter

Discover the magic of learning languages.

Subscribe to the Free Language Letter.

Your Name:

Your Email:

Ask Questions, Get Answers

Ask Language Questions

Ask anything about learning and teaching languages! Share your language questions.

View questions that have been asked and answered. Together we are creating a collective knowledge base for effective language learning and teaching. You can help!

Epilogue to A Scanner Darkly

Today we take a break from showcasing Chinese literature to feature the epilogue from the Chinese translation of Philip K. Dick's well-known short novel, A Scanner Darkly. As fans of PKD, we found the full translations to a number of his books buried in the foreign literature section of the Xinhua bookstore at Xidan and thought it might be worthwhile highlighting a passage as an example of a fairly straightforward English to Chinese translation.

On a related note, reading foreign literature in translation is an excellent strategy for making rapid progress towards communicative fluency, partly because Chinese translators tend to render complex phrasings into more commonplace expressions, and partly because native works often embrace obscurity in service to literary style. For someone working to master functional Chinese, reading foreign books in translation can be a good strategy for accelerating your exposure to the most high-frequency language you can really use: you'll spend less time consulting the dictionary and perhaps enjoying the writing more as well.