| In this page you will see some compound words (words formed by two       
      characters).  Such words appear extensively in chinese. Notice how two characters, 火 and 山 are combined to        
      make "volcano" - literally "fire mountain".  This        
      is a common way of making words and the logic of such character        
      combinations is often helpful to students when learning.  It is worth        
      noting though, that Chinese people would just read 火山 as        
      "volcano".  They would not have to "translate"        
      the meaning in their head.  A rough analogy would be that a western        
      reader would not assemble the characters 'c', 'a' and 't' to make        
      "cat" - they would just recognise that particular combination of        
      letters as a word.  More good examples appear in Machines.        
       You will also see that sky 天,  star 星, moon        
      月 and sun 日 are given more complex forms than in the first        
      Natural Objects page.  This is because although single characters        
      have a single meaning (or meanings), it is often necessary to clarify the        
      full word. Finally, note 雪花 (snowflake) - a poetic/descriptive      
      compound word formed by 雪 (snow) and 花 (flower) |