Im not sure if you are asking how to say ' I ' ( as in myself ) or if you are asking what the Chinese character for the letter I is .
If it is the first then it is Wo , the character for which is 我
If you are asking the second meaning then the answer is that there is no equivalents in Chinese for the Roman alphabet letters. Chinese characters represent sounds not letters.
The characters themselves can be made up of many different strokes but the sound is always mono-syllabic.
If you are talking about the pinyin -- the Chinese phonetics --, than 'I' is the sound or 'yii'.
beginning - 开端 [kāi duān]
a chinese character is called hanzi and in japan it called kanji
The Chinese character for 'dragon' is 龙 in simplified Chinese. In traditional Chinese it is '龍'. In pinyin, it is 'long'.
The Chinese use logograms - where a symbol represents a meaning or a word.
Shang developed system of writing by using pictographs.
Plus symbol (chinese): + Minus symbol (chinese): -
because current Chinese writing came from early Chinese writing
the Chinese dragon
http://www.chineseinkdesign.com/Chinese-Symbol-for-cousin.htm I !
Writing at the beginning the adequate symbol of an noble gas, in square parenthesis.
Japanese writing is composed of three different systems, one must not only learn them but the appropriate situations and things for which to use each system:Kanji/the traditional Chinese writing, a system of one symbol per word/ideaKatakana, a syllabary using one symbol per syllable, used for writing Japanese words not having Chinese symbolsHiragana/Romaji, a syllabary using one symbol per syllable, used mostly for writing words from foreign languagesThis may be hard or easy for different individuals to learn.
The Chinese symbol for mom is "媽媽" in traditional Chinese and "妈妈" in simplified Chinese.