Chinese, unlike Western languages like English, French, and German, does not have an alphabet and letters. Instead, it has something known as a "character system" that is composed of thousands of different symbols (known as characters) that each have a different pronunciation. So, rather than spelling with letters, Chinese write characters.
You can write Chinese Pinyin by using English letters since they are similar, but remember their pronunciations are not the same. Chinese characters are made up of strokes so there is nothing to do with the letters. If you need to translate Chinese to English, you can ask the AnyTranscription for help.
唐娜 (Tángnà)
Move to Beijing
we use letters and they use symbols to represent things we use letters and they use symbols to represent things There is no such thing as the Chinese alphabet. Each character has a meaning.
Rosales = 罗萨莱斯
there are no English letters in china, they use characters.
Letters as mails that you receive: 信 (xin)
No, there is no English letters in Chinese
There are no letters in the Chinese language. They do not have an alphabet. They have characters. Each character means a word. That is why their is 50,000+ characters in the Chinese language.
In Chinese, the letters D, L, N do not exist as individual symbols. They would be written using the corresponding Pinyin sounds, such as "dí" for D, "lí" for L, and "nǚ" for N.
You can't write any single letters of the English alphabet in Chinese, because the Chinese language doesn't have any equivalent of individual letters.
The Chinese do not use letters like our . . . they use pictures rather than letters, so there is no Chinese equivalent of the letter, "K".
No.
They have all of the letters in the English alphabet and some sounds that have 2-3 letters in them, if you are talking about pinyin. But if you are talking about bu pe mu fe, them there are 34 letters in the Chinese alphabet.
You can write Chinese Pinyin by using English letters since they are similar, but remember their pronunciations are not the same. Chinese characters are made up of strokes so there is nothing to do with the letters. If you need to translate Chinese to English, you can ask the AnyTranscription for help.
Google and type in Chinese letters
春节 (chūn jié)