There is no need to swear in Chinese or any other language
In Chinese, swearing can vary by region and can be complex due to cultural nuances. Common swear words in Mandarin include "肏你妈" (cao ni ma) and "傻逼" (sha bi), but these words are considered very vulgar and offensive. It's important to be respectful and mindful of cultural differences when using language.
It is "will swear." Example: "The man will swear if someone makes him mad."
The present tense of "swear" is "swears."
You can: * swear TO a person (make a binding verbal promise) * swear AT a person (curse them) * swear IN a person (make them a member of a jury or similar) but AFAIK you can't just swear a person.
The prefix of "swear" is "sw-"
The past simple for "swear" is "swore."
Chinease is not a language therefore you can not translate
Chinease food first came from just the chinease. They have their own way of life styles, and they created Chinease food.
yes
Britian
To kill the Chinease
47,035
No
Chinease
Chinease history
the most common chinease name ist Li, spoken Lii the second common name is Yen, spoken Chen
The menus at a chinease resturant.
原諒你