There is roughly about 47,035 characters in the Chinese alphabet.
The Chinese writing system does not have an alphabet like the English language. Instead, Chinese characters are logograms that represent words or morphemes. These characters are typically organized by radical and stroke count in dictionaries rather than alphabetical order.
This is a trick question. Chinese does not use an alphabet. It is a pictographic system.
No such thing as the Chinese alphabet you idiot
The Chinese writing system does not have an alphabet like the English language. Instead, Chinese characters represent words or morphemes. Modern Chinese dictionaries list around 8,000 characters, with basic literacy requiring knowledge of about 2,000 commonly used characters.
the china alphabet is Chinese: the Egypt alphabet is Egyptian
There isn't one, but there's a phonetic alphabet.
None. The Chinese "alphabet" contains words, not letters.
you cant... there isn't a Chinese alphabet
There is no single Chinese letter equivalent to the English alphabet letters from A to Z. Chinese characters are logograms that represent words or parts of words rather than individual sounds like letters in the alphabet. Each Chinese character corresponds to a syllable or a meaning.
Chinese does not have an alphabet, unless you are referring to pinyin, which is used to represent Chinese sounds via the Roman alphabet.
In the Chinese alphabet the word "aunt" can be spelled with either the traditional or simplified Chinese alphabet. However, they both translate as the same word-- "guma".