Chinese English

Translations to and from Chinese.
Zérö

Re: Chinese English

Post by Zérö »

Speaking of different ways to spell, perhaps you should learn how to type proper English before you lecture others on Chinese. However, I Appericiate your information and advice.
Raymond Wood

Re: Chinese English

Post by Raymond Wood »

I Love and miss you Mum

Re: Chinese English

Post by »

我们可以交个朋友吗?

[%sig%]
wangwww2670

Re: Chinese English

Post by wangwww2670 »

你们全不是中国人吗,你们觉得这个帖子很有意思吗?
Miss miss please,give me a kiss.
来是come去是go ,点头yes摇头no.
Please translete these stantenses.
sajan

Re: Chinese English

Post by sajan »

Hello

Thank u lot for get opertunity to see your web page.I like to learn chinese language but I dont know how to learn that It would be very helpful if you could let me have the Chinese.I hope you will inform me about it.
byeJ
acqui wrote:

> It would be very helpful if you could let me have the Chinese
> translation (in Chinese characters) and some English
> explanations of the following five phrases:
>
> 1. Good good study, day day up.
> 2. Don't old three old four.
> 3. Look and look, see and see.
> 4. People mountain people sea.
> 5. You really have two down sons.
>
> Thank you very much for your help.
>
> Jacqui
Fizzy

Re: Chinese English

Post by Fizzy »

Hia how are you and what are doing today

and by the way i only talk to females

ok bye
menna

Re: Chinese English

Post by menna »

hi iam working on a project about chinese language and i wana know your alphabetics in chinese thanks...
Dylan Sung

Re: Chinese English

Post by Dylan Sung »

There is no Chinese alphabet. Chinese is composed of characters, many many thousands of them, and a great deal of them are never used. In everyday usage, about 4500 characters may be used, which is less than a tenth of the total number of Chinese characters.

Chinese characters may be pronounced in different ways, and do not indicate precisely the sound, so, over the area of China, you get different people pronouncing the characters in their own local dialects. Countries such as Japan and Korea who still use Chinese characters have borrowed the sounds of the characters many centuries ago, and they have their own naturalised pronunciation of them.

Dyl.
reethree

Re: Chinese English

Post by reethree »

howdo you say how are you in chinese.
also my name is .and what is your name.alsohave agood day
adam

Re: Chinese English

Post by adam »

How are you=你好
my name is=我的名字是... or 我叫......
what is your name=你叫什丹W字?
have a good day=usually chinese do not say have a good day,



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