%0 Journal Article %T On the cognitive strategy of ideographic writing: Taking the semanto %A Kehe Zang %J Journal of Chinese Writing Systems %@ 2513-8510 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/2513850217748208 %X Abstract Ideographic writings, such as Chinese characters, do not lay stress on the pronunciation of characters. However, the so-called function of indicating meaning has been reduced in the long history of evolution. A question then arises as to whether it is necessary to maintain such complex structures for modern writings. The main structural type of Chinese character system became the ¡®semanto-phonetic structure¡¯ long ago. Shuowen jiezi is the earliest extant compilation of Chinese characters, in which semanto-phonetic characters account for about 81% of the total characters. In fact, the Chu bamboo-strip scripts of the Warring States, which are much earlier than Shuowen jiezi of the Han Dynasty, had demonstrated such a tendency. Its primary reason is to differentiate new meanings from the extant meanings, and to create orthographs. The preference of semanto-phonetic structure in the development of Chinese writing is more convenient in terms of the cognitive classification of Chinese characters than in emphasizing the phonetic function of phonetics %K Chu bamboo-strip scripts %K semanto-phonetic structure %K cognitive classification %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2513850217748208