Chinese does not use any alphabets. Chinese writing is not alphabetic, rather, it is pictographic.
"Baby" in Chinese is pronounced as "bǎobèi" (宝贝).
You pronounce it as (bu4) with the intonation going down. And do not prolong the word
Japanese writing consists of three different alphabets: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Hiragana and Katakana are phonetic alphabets with characters representing sounds, while Kanji consists of characters borrowed from Chinese writing, each representing a word or concept.
We means 我们 in Chinese. And the pronounce of 我们 is "wo men"
In Mandarin Chinese, "seven" is pronounced as "qī" (七).
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. :)
hundred thousand million eighty eighteen nineteen sixteen interogative
To spell Kaydee in Chinese is Kai di depending on how you pronounce it. In Chinese they pronounce Kaydee, Katie with using the "t:.
death in chinese is SIyou go all HEAVY when you pronounce the word,not high pitched.
Kitten is 小貓 in Chinese.
if you mean in Chinese then - how
Chuantong.
success
Bye in Chinese is 'zaijian', which is pronounced as 'zye jian'.
"Baby" in Chinese is pronounced as "bǎobèi" (宝贝).
帅 pronounce as Suai
it is just abbigail