Cinese characters are logograms used in the writing ofChinese, Japanese, Korean, and some other Asian languages. In Standard Chinese, they are called hànzì (simplifiedChinese: 汉字; traditional Chinese: 漢字, lit "Han characters"). ... Collectively, they are known as CJK characters.
because current Chinese writing came from early Chinese writing
The symbols that represent words that are used in writing Chinese are called "hanzi". One character would be called a "han" character. Japanese written language would be called "kanji".
chinese writing uses logographs
The first record of Chinese writing is on oracle bones from the Shang dynasty. Written Chinese probably began with pictographs and ideographs.
That is unknown, however it would be helpful if you called it the correct name in your quest for knowledge. It is called "Mandarine" not "Chinese". Actually you might want to check your spelling, the correct spelling is 'Mandarin'
The chinese writing is called Hanzi.
The traditional writing implement for Chinese characters is called a "mao bi" or hair brush in Chinese. Pronunciation is roughly "mao" rhyming with "how" and "bi" rhyming with "bee".
a chinese character is called hanzi and in japan it called kanji
It is called calligraphy.
Chinese letters are called characters. the largest dictionary has 56,000 characterz.....amazing!!!
If you are referring to Chinese Calligraphy, it is called 书法 shu(1) fa(3) in Mandarin.
the style of chinese that is now used is called pinyang chinese. it is a mixture between traditional and simplified
because current Chinese writing came from early Chinese writing
Han or Chinese Writing
The symbols that represent words that are used in writing Chinese are called "hanzi". One character would be called a "han" character. Japanese written language would be called "kanji".
"writing" in Chinese is "写(xiě) ".
chinese writing uses logographs