hello:你好
goodbye:再见
thank you:谢谢
sorry:对不起
excuse me:打扰一下;对不起
Chinese language is a tonal language with characters representing words or concepts, while English is an alphabetic language with an alphabet representing sounds to form words. Chinese does not have verb tenses or plurals, and relies on context for understanding, whereas English uses word order and grammar rules for clarity. Additionally, Chinese does not have articles (a, an, the) like English.
You can not. English is a entirely different language from Chinese. It either English or Chinese must be translated to be understood by the speaker of another language.
The most spoken language in the world is Chinese not English, but after English most likely Spanish or Hindu.
It means official language, hence mandarin.
The Chinese language unlike the English language has no alphabet. That said, there are no consonants or vowels in the Chinese language.
Definitely, english. Then, spanish and chinese.
Chinese language is a tonal language with characters representing words or concepts, while English is an alphabetic language with an alphabet representing sounds to form words. Chinese does not have verb tenses or plurals, and relies on context for understanding, whereas English uses word order and grammar rules for clarity. Additionally, Chinese does not have articles (a, an, the) like English.
English and Chinese as there is a huge Chinese population.
You can not. English is a entirely different language from Chinese. It either English or Chinese must be translated to be understood by the speaker of another language.
Chinese symbols are to the Chinese language what letters of the alphabet are to the English language
Both
good bye in mardarin Chinese - zai jian in french - Aurevior We can see this is how you say it in french and mardrin but how do you say it in the English language, no not how we speack English but like british language!!!
P. Poletti has written: 'A Chinese and English dictionary' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Chinese language, Chinese, English, Dialects, Dictionaries, English language
Richard L Kimball has written: 'China beginner's/traveler's dictionary, English-Chinese, Chinese-English in Pinyin romanization =' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Chinese language, English language, Chinese, English
English french spanish Italian Chinese
Rongfang Liu has written: 'English-Chinese and Chinese-English glossary of transportation terms' -- subject(s): Terms and phrases, Chinese language, Chinese, Dictionaries, Railroads, English language, Automotive Transportation, English, Terminology
English