Many people learned Chinese and found that Chinese is not as hard as our imaged, we are like it, it is very interesting.hope you like to.
"Teriyaki" is a Japanese word, and in approximation, would equate to 照燒 (based on cultural/language influences between Chinese and Japanese)
Origami is a Japanese word, and I don't know how you would say/write it in Chinese.
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. :)
There are many differences between the two languages, but it takes time to spot them. Japanese is often written in kanji, which is Chinese calligraphy but is also made up of katakana and hiragana, two alphabets used only by the Japanese language. The language itself is very different, because it is a different country, culture and lifestyle. The number system is taken from the Chinese language, but it should be noted that Japanese has its own counting system that isn't recognized by many people striving to learn Japanese. It should be realized that these are two separate languages, and it would be a much shorter list to recognize the similarities rather than the differences.
Most of the languages of the world do not belong on the European language tree, such as all of the indigenous languages of Asia Africa, Australia and the Americas. This would include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hebrew, Arabic, Cherokee, Navaho, etc. There are also some European languages that are not on the European language tree, such as Hungarian and Basque.
The Chinese written language is called Hanzi, which consists of characters representing words and concepts rather than individual sounds. Each character can have multiple meanings and pronunciations depending on the context.
the language would be Japanese
The most commonly preferred language among Boystudents would likely depend on personal preference. However, Chinese and Japanese are often considered beneficial choices due to their growing influence in the global economy. French and German may also be popular for their cultural significance and business opportunities. Ultimately, the favorite language would vary among individuals.
There are several Universities at which you would be able to learn the Chinese language. In order to find out which Universities in your area offer Chinese as a language, I would encourage visiting them online or in persona and researching their language departments.
It is a style of Japanese where you write like in Japanese but pronounce like in Chinese, so the character for "rain" (雨) would be pronounced "ame" in Japanese but pronounced "yu" in Chinese, and likely it would be "yu" and not "ame" in onyomi.
No, you would be most like her if you were Japanese, or from Japanese heritage.
There is no such thing as a Chinese ninja. Ninjas originated from japan. however China had far superior karate masters. So basicaly the Chinese were highly skilled in karate but not with weapons. whereas the Japanese knew karate but they weren't as good as the Chinese but the Japanese were highly skilled with weapons. so in my opinion, in a fight between a feudal Chinese warrior and a feudal Japanese warrior (ninja) , the Japanese ninja would win