There is not an equivalent of alphabetical order for the Chinese language. They do not use letters. Instead, they use characters that are called logograms.
Unlike the English alphabet, there is no ABC order for Chinese characters. If one were to list them all, then it would take a while since researchers say there are over 80000 Chinese characters.
There are no numbers in alphabetical order! In alphanumeric order, numbers come first.
You don't. Mandarin (chinese) does not have a phonetic alphabet. Not all English (or foreign) names have an equivalent in the Chinese Language. Just use the English reading when in doubt, otherwise the Chinese phonetic translation may lead to unintended humourous results. Some people have translated 'Timothy' as 蒂莫西 [dì mò xī].
There is no alphabet in the Chinese language, unlike English or even Korean or Japanese (and even Korean and Japanese have no set order for their 'alphabet'), as Chinese language is simply written with different strokes put together. You might find websites that give you the way English alphabets might be written in Chinese, phonetic-wise, but that is only how we would pronounce English alphabets in Chinese phonetically, and not the Chinese alphabet. :)
a then b then c
The Chinese writing system does not have an alphabet like the English language. Instead, Chinese characters are logograms that represent words or morphemes. These characters are typically organized by radical and stroke count in dictionaries rather than alphabetical order.
you order chinese??? you order chinese???
The Chinese equivalent of a Japanese Geisha is known as Yi Ji or Qinglou Nuzi, as far as I can tell.
God, of course. Buddha is just the Chinese equivalent of Jesus.
The Ghost Festival
Chinese Brides?
yes
Q235a
"Casey is an Irish name, not a Chinese name, so there is no equivalent for Casey in Chinese.
Zhongqiujie is a Mandarin Chinese equivalent of 'August [or Mid-Autumn] Festival'.
Total population of Earth = 6.8 billion Chinese population = 1.3 billion 0.0015% of the world order Chinese food every day. 3.6 billion people order Chinese food a year.
Chinese people order things that they like to eat. Just like other people. But they usually order rice because it is something they eat almost everyday. I'm part Chinese and I live in China and I eat it everyday.