18 May 2014

Who Here Can Read Chinese


That's the barrel shank markings on Lei.  Arsenal 296 is either Chongqing or Jianshe depending on who you ask.  I am wondering what the text reads and if it decides the matter.

2 comments:

  1. FuzzyGeff says: "I know three of those characters, and can find the fourth in a dictionary. Be warned: I'm using a Japanese-English dictionary, because I never actually studied Chinese. Anyway, from left to right: 五 (five), 三 (three), 年 (year), 式 (that’s the one I had to look up; the dictionary says “style; ceremony; rite; function; method; system; form; expression;”). Perhaps we’re looking at a multi-character word; the same dictionary defines “年式” as “(n) model year (of an automobile, etc.);”.

    As far as I can tell, it says “year ’53 model”, but I have no idea how that would be pronounced in any form of spoken Chinese. Google Translate says that “五三年式” is pronounced “Wǔsān nián shì” and means “2053 style”. Google translate is sometimes dead wrong, though."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That makes sense since it's a Type 53 Carbine.

      Delete

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