"Sup" in Traditional Chinese is "你在幹嘛?" In Simplified Chinese, this is 你在干嘛. This isn't an exact translation, but it's the closest thign in chinese. It means "what are you doing, what's going on?" It's pronounced "Ni3 zai4 gan4ma2?" in Hanyu Pinyin.
开心。 the first character means "open" and the second "heart" so it literally means "open heart" but it means happy or joyful.
You have to follow a stroke order.
房屋;房åï¼›ä½å®…
It's 车
No symbols are listed.
forever your
我愛你 [ Wǒ ài nǐ ]
The name Garima means grace.
回头见 [huí tóu jiàn]
Ancient Chinese would write using pictorial symbols (something like Egyptian hieroglyphics), like the word for shell would look like a shell, etc. Over the years, these symbols have morphed into the modern-day words, with the lines and strokes and everything, that is called Chinese today.
Chinese symbols are to the Chinese language what letters of the alphabet are to the English language
No Chinese person even knows all the symbols or characters. So know as many as you do and keep on learning.
美麗定義 Měi lì dìng yì
Garima Srivastava has written: 'Cost-benefit analysis of participatory irrigation management'
There are no symbols, only characters.
Chinese characters are logograms, where each character represents a specific word or concept. This system provides a way to represent the Chinese language, which has many homophones due to its tonal nature. Using characters allows for written communication even among different Chinese dialects.