唐娜 (Tángnà)
dona
The letters ALICRPET spell "particle."
It is spelt "Chinese".
The letters STAINILI spell the word "initials."
There is no good website to learn how to spell your name in Chinese, for you can't spell your name in Chinese, you have to use strokes. But strokes don't mean anything! They just make characters by grouping together to make a character. One stroke and another grouped with others could mean "moon", and those same strokes added with others could mean the exact opposite!
Letters as mails that you receive: 信 (xin)
迈克
It's "开"。
Beijing is spelled as 北京 in Chinese characters.
Chinese doesn't have letters, each word is a specific character. It would most likely be the exact same as English.
Chinese does not use letters... this question can not be answered. Chinese instead uses character-words and thus only old, traditional words can be used.
Unlike Western languages like French, German, and English, Chinese does not have an alphabet. Written Chinese doesn't have letters that spell out words. Instead, it has characters that represent the different words of the language. The character for "open" is 開. In Simplified Chinese this is written 开.
麻雀 ma(2) que(4)
It is not possible to answer this question because of the special Chinese characters. You are welcomed in Chinese, is spelled by spelling out the individual letters going forward.
Donna = Kona
you don't SPELL words in Chinese Each has a different character instead of a group of letters. Haley in Chinese is 海利 (if your computer can show Chinese characters), pronounced as "hi-li". If you have to spell it, then it's spelled "hai li".
You write it like "八婆" (ba1 po2)