In Chinese,we have diffirent words for "family" in diffirent situation.
"家" jia1 is for "back home or the house where you live".
"家人" jia1ren2 is for "family members".
"家åº" jia1ting2 is for"a big family or the family values".
家庭(jiā tíng)
The word for Family in Chinese is 家庭. This is the same in Traditional and Simplified Chinese. It's pronounced "jia1ting2" in Hanyu Pinyin. It's pronounced "jiatyng" in Gwoyeu Romatzyh.
The word 'Chinese' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun Chinese is a word for the languages of China, a native or national of China, or a person of Chinese descent.The adjective Chinese is a word to describe a noun as of China or its people, languages, or culture.Noun: The Chinese have a long history of art and science.Adjective: The Chinese porcelain has been in my family for many generations.
The Chinese word for "little" is 小 (xiǎo).
Yes, the Lumingkit Family may have Chinese heritage based on the surname "Lu." However, it is not possible to determine if they are specifically half Chinese without more information on their ancestry.
The Chinese Erhu is part of the huqin family in the Chinese classification. In Canada, or US it is part of the strings family.
No, it isn't. Chinese and Mongolian are so different, first is the writing( As i am a Chinese person, I think Mongolian is very intricacy than Chinese, sometimes maybe it is just is few word then can let you know the meaning in Chinese, but in Mongolian it will take a lot of word!), second is the sound( wow, that is very different, everyone can heard that is different.)Linguistic Answer:No, the two languages are unrelated. Mongolian is part of the Altaic family, and Mandarin Chinese is part of the Sino-Tibetan family.
the Chinese word for little is chjiow
the chinese word is ping guo
Kyuuketsuki is the Chinese word for vampire.
The Chinese word for violin is "Xiǎotíqín".
it as definitely not the governor. it was the family. Ta-da!!!