Wǒ dàibiǎo zhōngguó guó (I dont know what any of the fancy accents are)
You can say "chica china" in Spanish to mean Chinese girl.
China is capitalized because it's a country. If you want to say you speak English or you are American, go ahead, but I think Chinese is capitalized
China - Çin (Chin) Chinese - Çinli I am Chinese - Çinliyim
I don't know too much about China, but I would say that the Dragon represented China because of the festivals. There really is more than one animal representing China, because there is a different animal representing the country each year. You should try looking it up ;)
From the Related Link: Mandarin [Chinese] (China) [it is so] ShiMandarin [Chinese] (China) [correct] DuiMandarin [Chinese] (China) [okay] HaoShr / shr de
zhōng guó
represent means daibiao so in the form with the tense representing you should say zai daibiao 代表 is daibiao and 在代表 is zai daibiao
You may say 'ni2hao3'你好, or 'hao3'好."Ni hao ma?" is how are you? Ni hao, is a greeting!what are other greetings in China?[JAPANESE: "Konichi wa" is not Chinese; different Country]
you can say han3 yu4.. but that would only be proper if you are talking about the chinese language. "Chinese" is a foreign word for the Chinese people. As for the language, they say hanyu(han was the name of an ancient empire in china,"yu" means "language") As for the people, they call themselves Zhongguoren("zhong"="center,middle","guo"="country,state","ren"="people". Chinese comes from china. A new research said the name " China" was the way the Hun's way of calling chinese people. Hun was a tribe which was once neighbor to China and moved westwards to Europe at last. A nation in china which was near hun was called "chin"("jin"in Pinyin), so they called china "chin".
Zhōngguó/中国
Chinese is an ancient language that had diversified in several dialects that are spoken in different regions of the large country that is China, this is by one billion people, or more or less one fifth of the world's population. To say 'joy' in Chinese, you can use the expression 'xi yue'.
Representerar landet [Sverige]