我先走了。 wǒ xiān zǒu le
In Mandarin Chinese, you can say "你先走" (nǐ xiān zǒu) which translates to "you go first."
在这里,我走 zài zhè lǐ, wǒ zǒu If you mean 'Here I go!' as in taking the plunge, e.g. bungee jumping or getting started on something, e.g. start running, more appropriate to say 我来啦!wo(3) lai(2) la, lit. 'I am coming!'
To say "go" in Chinese, you can use the word "去" (qù).
In Mandarin Chinese, "pug" is pronounced as "bāo mǎn quǎn" (鲍曼犬). The term "pug" itself may vary in pronunciation among different Chinese dialects.
'I love you' in Mandarin Chinese is 'Wo3 ai4 ni3' said 'w-o eye nee' (The numbers represent the tones of voice used. 3 makes the tone go down then up and 4 makes the tone of voice go down)
"Wo yao chu qu" in Mandarin Chinese translates to "I want to go out" in English.
心 [xīn] for chinese- english translation,go to nciku。com source:i am chinese living in china
You should say "向左走" (pinyin: xià ng zuǒ zǒu).
Mandarin Garden.
在这里,我走 zài zhè lǐ, wǒ zǒu If you mean 'Here I go!' as in taking the plunge, e.g. bungee jumping or getting started on something, e.g. start running, more appropriate to say 我来啦!wo(3) lai(2) la, lit. 'I am coming!'
Well, you can't. You have to go to Chinese school or something, like a party or tutoring program.
To say "go" in Chinese, you can use the word "去" (qù).
Fookien/Hokkien : go tsit go (go = 5 , tsit = 10 )Cantonese : ng(m) sahp ng(m) (ng/m = 5 , sahp = 10)Mandarin/Putonghua : Wu shi wu (wu = 5 , shi 10)You can't ask a question like that.. cause there are so many dialects in China, if you ask 'How to say 55 in chinese" I would make up a joke and reply " fivety-five (in a chinese accent) "
In Mandarin Chinese, "pug" is pronounced as "bāo mǎn quǎn" (鲍曼犬). The term "pug" itself may vary in pronunciation among different Chinese dialects.
" Zao3 Shang4 Hao3 " "Zao3 Shang4"means "morning"in English. "Hao3"means "Good"in English. In Chinese ,we have 4 tones. 1 means the tone is flat. 2 means the tone is go up. 3 means the tone goes down first, and then goes up. 4 means the tone is go down.
This would depend on the reason you are learning each language. If you were planning to go to live in France then Chinese would probably not be the correct choice. However if you have an eye to better carreer prospects in the future then I would say Chinese. There are probably many more English to French speakers for employers to choose from than Chinese to English speakers .
'I love you' in Mandarin Chinese is 'Wo3 ai4 ni3' said 'w-o eye nee' (The numbers represent the tones of voice used. 3 makes the tone go down then up and 4 makes the tone of voice go down)
It depends on your purpose. If you want to learn Mandarin for free, you can go to Chinese-tools or Chinese-forum to learn, and there are some tools so that you can learn it easily. But if u have no base of Mandarin, you need a teacher to follow. And you can find a professional teacher at a very good Mandarin School. Of course, you need check the school carefully, as their scale and quality of teaching vary, as well as their environment. As far asI know, Mandarin Garden is pretty good, and they also have free Mandarin Language Exchange Courses. So you can ask more info on their website. See related links.