........korean.......
When writing a letter to Japanese person you need to establish what language to use. You should ensure you know the type of letter whether it is informal or formal. Have your content in place and write it just like any other letter.
Chinese include ( Japanese and Korean) + Arabic..obviously the alphabet AND the pronunciation are unbelievable !Answer PolishThere is no such thing. Language difficulty depends on the person. Other factors are the learner's native language and their familiarity with the target language's culture.
I have doubts about this being really a Japanese person. He/She writes to a Chinese: "Chinese poetry may be breathtakingly beautiful, but you know as well as I do that it does not translate into Western languages, which guarantees that I will never be able to appreciate its beauty." A Japanese can easily read Chinese poetry. A Japanese will NEVER speak about "westsern language" as if it was somehow superior to "non-western" languages. My 2 cents
"Chuugokugo" is a Japanese word and in English it means "Chinese"
Though Japanese are a little taller than Chinese averagely. But different Chinese from different parts of China are much different in stature. Most northerners are much taller than southerners of China and Japanese. And many Chinese can speak more standard English. Japanese used to bowing in greeting, but most Chinese used to shaking hands. Japanese like quiet; in contrast, Chinese is more extrovert to some extent.
Of course, Chinese. China's increasingly powerful stature and more business opportunities relating to the Chinese language means it has become one of the world's most important business tools. It is critical to the success of business negotiations. But on the other hand, this is based on the assumption that China's stature is indeed increasingly powerful and will continue to increase in the longer term. Consumption wise, the average Chinese-speaking person has yet to reach the level of the average Japanese-speaker. So if it is possible, learn both languages if you are interested in engaging Northeast Asia. To the native English-speaker, Japanese could be the more difficult language to learn, but it all depends on other factors like whether you have the benefit of good teachers who are able to explain in English when it is needed, and/or whether you have Japanese-speaking friends who are more than willing to converse in Japanese with you. Also, by learning Chinese characters you basically acquired part of the Japanese language; and by learning the Japanese Kanji characters you acquired part of the Chinese language.
If there person is speaking English, they will simply be called tornadoes. Otherwise, what they are called depends on the language. In Japanese, for example, they are called tatsumaki, while in Chinese they are lóngjuǎnfēng.
A person can translate Chinese writing into English by using one of the many online translations websites. This can be done on 'Google Translate', 'Babylon' and 'MDBG'.
Yeah. I'm one of those Chinese guys that likes the Japanese. I think they are cool people. Same goes with my friends. We like the Japanese as much as the people in my Chinese country.I am Chinese PLA General and here is your answer.
It depends on if an Antartican person studied Japanese language or if a Japanese person went to Antartica, but yes, it is possible for someone to speak Japanese in Antartica.
Chinese people had to flee areas the Japanese were invading because the Japanese would kill a Chinese for the sake of eliminating one more Chinese person.
sinologist