JeremyWong
New member
When I started Chinese, I agonized over whether to learn Simplified or Traditional. Now, after two years, I'm learning both—and it's not as hard as I feared. Here's my experience.
Why learn both? Mary Anderson from UBC explains it perfectly: Traditional characters show the history and structure, while Simplified is practical for daily use. Knowing both allows you to read materials from all regions and understand character etymology .
False friends to watch for: Some Simplified characters map to multiple Traditional ones. 面 is "face" in both, but noodles in Simplified is also 面, while Traditional uses 麵 for noodles . Context helps, but be aware!
My learning strategy:

Why learn both? Mary Anderson from UBC explains it perfectly: Traditional characters show the history and structure, while Simplified is practical for daily use. Knowing both allows you to read materials from all regions and understand character etymology .
False friends to watch for: Some Simplified characters map to multiple Traditional ones. 面 is "face" in both, but noodles in Simplified is also 面, while Traditional uses 麵 for noodles . Context helps, but be aware!
My learning strategy:
- Started with Simplified (easier entry)
- Added Traditional gradually through reading Taiwanese materials
- Use Pleco dictionary to see both forms side-by-side
- Practice writing one form, recognize the other
- HSK vocabulary lists in both forms
- Chairman Bao news app with toggle option
- Language journal alternating forms daily