They don't have one as such, it's just one huge collection of characters. They do have certain stroke (line) groups known as radicals which contribute to a character's meaning, though. Also, Chinese can be written in English characters known as pinyin, which shows the pronunciation.
This is a trick question. Chinese does not use an alphabet. It is a pictographic system.
None. The Chinese "alphabet" contains words, not letters.
There is no such thing as the language Chinese in china they speak either manderin or Cantonese and for either one of those languages there are no alphabets at all
Chinese is not written in alphabet, although it uses alphabet to transcribe Mandarin sounds -- a system known as pinyin.
There is no such thing as a Chinese or Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses 2 syllabaries (symbols that represent whole syllables) and about 2000 Chinese characters. Chinese uses tens of thousands of characters.
There is roughly about 47,035 characters in the Chinese alphabet.
This is a trick question. Chinese does not use an alphabet. It is a pictographic system.
No such thing as the Chinese alphabet you idiot
the china alphabet is Chinese: the Egypt alphabet is Egyptian
There isn't one, but there's a phonetic alphabet.
you cant... there isn't a Chinese alphabet
None. The Chinese "alphabet" contains words, not letters.
china language
There is no such thing as the language Chinese in china they speak either manderin or Cantonese and for either one of those languages there are no alphabets at all
In the Chinese alphabet the word "aunt" can be spelled with either the traditional or simplified Chinese alphabet. However, they both translate as the same word-- "guma".
Chinese language does not have letters, so there is no equivalent of the English, or any other, alphabet in Chinese. Alphabet is used only to transcribe Chinese pronunciation in the pinyin system.
Chinese is not written in alphabet, although it uses alphabet to transcribe Mandarin sounds -- a system known as pinyin.