The word "toad"(癞蛤蟆) would be very easy in an English-language spelling bee, but not in a nationally televised contest in China.
In Chinese, toad has throe characters that (make) up of 46 individual strokes (笔画). Yu Shuang, 8-year-old contestant, quickly wrote the characters on a screen that projected her effort on a big display above her head. When she finished, one of three judges hit the bell signaling a correct answer. the other two didn't agree, (point) out that the young girl had missed a single dot in the third character.
Yu wasn't alone. The show tested a group of adults in the audience, just 30% of could write toad correctly.
Since the first show on a minor TV channel about educational programming, the "Chinese. Characters Dictation Competition" (explode) in popularity. The show shifted to a Friday evening time on CCTV-1, even challenging the popularity of the country's most (watch) shows, including China's version of "The Voice".
Its creator, Guan Zhengwen said," The hope is the show could arouse people's (enthusiastic) for the language, which d one of the most spectacular treasures of Chinese civilization and the fifth big invention the Chinese people have given to humanity. The so-called four great inventions from China (typical) are listed as paper, gunpowder, the compass and printing.