Henry Courtenay Fenn
Encyclopedia
Henry Courtenay Fenn, more commonly known as H. C. Fenn, (February 26, 1894 - July 1978) was an American sinologist and architect of Yale University
Yale University
Yale University is a private, Ivy League university located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701 in the Colony of Connecticut, the university is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States...

's Chinese language program.

H. C. Fenn was the son of the Reverend Dr. Courtenay Hughes Fenn
Courtenay Hughes Fenn
Courtenay Hughes Fenn, or C. H. Fenn, was an American Presbyterian missionary to China, and compiler of The Five Thousand Dictionary, a widely-used basic Chinese-English dictionary that has gone through numerous reprints. Fenn's Chinese name was 芳泰瑞 .Fenn was born in 1866 at Clyde, New York,...

, missionary to China and compiler of The Five Thousand Dictionary, and his wife Alice Holstein May Fenn, and grew up in Peking. He married Constance Latimer Sargent on January 27, 1925. Fenn was active in the "Yale system" of Chinese grammar developed by himself, George Kennedy, Gardner Tewksbury, Wang Fangyu and others working in the Institute of Far Eastern Languages at Yale in the late 1940s.

Selected works

  • Songs from Hypnia, Henry C. Fenn, 1915
  • A Syllabus of the History of Chinese Civilization and Culture, by L. C. Goodrich and H. C. Fenn, 1929, 1941
  • Beginning Chinese, by John De Francis, edited by Henry C. Fenn and George A. Kennedy, 1946
  • Chinese characters easily confused, Henry C. Fenn, 1953
  • Chinese dialogues, edited by Henry C. Fenn & Pao-che`n Lee, 1953
  • Speak Mandarin, by Henry C. Fenn and Gardner M. Tewksbury, Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn., 1967
  • "Introduction to Chinese Sentence Structure," by Henry C. Fenn, date unknown.
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