I think you are asking what the Chinese word "dui" means in English. The word is pronounced like "dway". It basically means "correct". If you make a statement, Chinese people can say "dui" which means "you are correct".
對不起 or 抱歉 is I'm sorry in written Chinese. In pinyin it is dui bu qi or bao qian.
duibuchi (dui pronounced the same as dwee and bu pronounced as the same as boo)
You can not. English is a entirely different language from Chinese. It either English or Chinese must be translated to be understood by the speaker of another language.
No, there is no English letters in Chinese
english to chinese
Xuhua Chen has written: 'Ying Han dui yi zhi dao' -- subject(s): Translating into Chinese, Translating into English, Chinese language, English language, Problems, exercises
派队 (pai dui)
DUI bu qi
YES, I am
对不起。 DUI bu qi. haha, there are so many questions about Chinese that unsolved.
对不起 Dui Bu Qi
Pingfang Yu has written: 'Han, Ying xue xi ci dian dui bi yan jiu' -- subject(s): Encyclopedias and dictionaries, Chinese language, History and criticism, Dictionaries, Chinese Encyclopedias and dictionaries, English language
Mingyi Wang has written: 'Dui hua yu dui kang' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Chinese reunification question, 1949-
Dui bu qi. It means, sorry. I am not Chinese but i learnt Chinese(mandarin) since age three so i know.
there are no English letters in china, they use characters.
對不起 or 抱歉 is I'm sorry in written Chinese. In pinyin it is dui bu qi or bao qian.
It is pronounced " dui bu qi " The Chinese characters are " 对不起 "