I've parsed out vocabulary from these taiwanese tests and converted to flashcards in pleco's format. Useful e.g. for seeing term levels, intended part of speech and sometimes definitions/examples.
TOCFL vocab was updated some couple years ago and I haven't yet seen a processed version of the latest list, so here it goes. Current version (2022/2023) has 7517 terms, or 7847 with variants expanded like here. CCCC is essentially children's TOCFL variant with just three levels up to TOCFL L2 / CEFR A2, 1197 terms / 1344 with variants.
There are basic definitions and part of speech tags in CCCC and TBCL up to level 3, and TBCL additionally has many example compounds and sentences. TOCFL list only provides POS, no definitions, but has them for terms at all levels.
Note: level numbers in tests are a little different: TOCFL n ≈ TBCL n+1 ≈ CCCC n+1.
Sources:
Part of speech tags should be pretty self explanatory, except "Vs" maybe unfamiliar to some - taiwanese linguists typically categorize adjectives as a type of verb, stative or state verb (Vs) because of how they work in chinese grammar. For more details see https://tocfl.edu.tw/assets/files/vocabulary/8000_description_202204.pdf
TBCL has a nice grammar points list here. There's not much really to parse, it's already in readily usable format, so I'm just leaving the link:
TOCFL vocab was updated some couple years ago and I haven't yet seen a processed version of the latest list, so here it goes. Current version (2022/2023) has 7517 terms, or 7847 with variants expanded like here. CCCC is essentially children's TOCFL variant with just three levels up to TOCFL L2 / CEFR A2, 1197 terms / 1344 with variants.
There are basic definitions and part of speech tags in CCCC and TBCL up to level 3, and TBCL additionally has many example compounds and sentences. TOCFL list only provides POS, no definitions, but has them for terms at all levels.
Note: level numbers in tests are a little different: TOCFL n ≈ TBCL n+1 ≈ CCCC n+1.
Sources:
Part of speech tags should be pretty self explanatory, except "Vs" maybe unfamiliar to some - taiwanese linguists typically categorize adjectives as a type of verb, stative or state verb (Vs) because of how they work in chinese grammar. For more details see https://tocfl.edu.tw/assets/files/vocabulary/8000_description_202204.pdf
TBCL has a nice grammar points list here. There's not much really to parse, it's already in readily usable format, so I'm just leaving the link:
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