China has one official written language: Chinese.
Although most of the dialects of China are not mutually intelligible, the written form is basically the same throughout the country.
In other words, a person who speaks Wu cannot understand a person who speaks Hokkien, but the written form is virtually the same, so they could write to each other with no problem.
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Most books in Europe were written in Latin. There were numerous books in the Arab World and in China that were written in other languages.
Zhang Xi has written: 'Vowel systems of the Manchu-Tungus languages of China'
In theory, it can be written in any of the 6,809 languages of the world, but most of those languages use the same written number system.
China has many languages that ranges from 7 to 13 total languages. The most spoken among the languages is Mandarin. With this, the translation of 'i love you' in Mandarin is 'wo ai ni'.
All known languages in India have written forms. Some may not be considered true alphabets though.
In China they speak many languages, but the four major ones are: Mandarin, Cantonese, Hmong and English. China is a very large country, so many Chinese speak the languages of the surrounding countries, as well as of persons who have immigrated to their area.
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In Hotan, China, the main languages spoken are Uyghur, a Turkic language, and Mandarin Chinese. Other languages spoken in the area include Kyrgyz, Tajik, and Kazakh, due to the diverse ethnic groups living in the region.
Yes, there are languages such as Chinese and Japanese that use characters instead of an alphabet to represent their writing system. These characters can be logographic (representing entire words) or syllabic (representing syllables).
The glossary is written in aproximatly every language there is in America, if it was outside of America(united states) then those are the languages we wouldn't have
China
Chinese and Mandarin