No, while it did come out in Japan, it will be translated into the language of the country you are in IF you buy it in that country. It will come out in America on April 1, 2011.
Absolutely not. There are many Chinese actors and actresses.
well, rock smash is only a move to defeat pokemon(you can get the tm in nacrene city from a chinese girl)not for smashing rocks like in other versions
Black only: Reshiram, Tornadus White Only: Zekrom, Thundorus
konichiwa konichiwa
"Only Yesterday" is available with English subtitles only . [Audio: German, Japanese, Simp. and Trad. Chinese, Thai / Subtitles: English, French, German, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Thai .]
that only the chinese understended their language
The adjective in the sentence is "Chinese," which describes the language spoken in China.
There are more than 80,000 Chinese words in the Chinese vocabulary. You however need to master only around 3,000 characters to be conversant in the language.
Chinese. Yes
Mandarin Chinese is primarily spoken in the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, and Singapore. It is also spoken in communities worldwide, especially in countries with significant Chinese populations such as Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
You can't. The only possible way you can get zekrom in Pokemon black is trading with somebody in pokmon white, in which you would need wireless communications, which some people don't have. hope this helps! :o)
China has only one official language Mandarin Chinese.
China and Singapore would be the only two countries that I know of that have Chinese as an offical language- also people speaking Chinese can be found in most countries.
BENGALI ?
Because they know more about other Chinese than other nationalities and because it would mean they have to speak another language than what they have been taught
Baidu is said and pronounced in the Chinese language. Baidu is used most often in the Beijing part of China. This language is not the only dialect used in China.
NO ! Chinese, Spanish, Arabic, and others are still widely used ( though English is popular)