Not all English (or foreign) names have an equivalent in the Chinese Language.
Just use the English reading when in doubt, otherwise the Chinese phonetic translation may lead to unintended humourous repercussions.
If I were to change 'Jillian' to the Chinese reading now, it sounds phonetically like the Chinese equivalent for "Chicken Face".
supposedly it's chinese but i'm chinese and the spelling of it has always been xie xie. not that way of spelling.
One less 'n' assuming you are trying to spell 'Chinese'
To pronounce your name in Chinese, it would be helpful to know the specific characters or spelling of your name. Chinese is a tonal language, so pronunciation depends on the tones of the characters. However, if you provide the spelling or characters, I can assist you with the correct pronunciation.
"Shieh" is not a common Chinese last name. It is more likely a variant spelling of "Xie" or "Xieh", which is a Chinese surname.
The Chinese word "Xia" is pronounced like "shyah" with a rising tone. It is the pinyin spelling of the word written as "夏" in Chinese characters.
'Jillian' in Chinese characters is writtenn as 吉琳. It is pronounced or written in pinyin as 'ji lin'.
chao in Chinese spelling.
You spelt it in your question.
London
She has a tatoo of her dead grandmother on her foot and one of the Chinese symbol for friend on the back of her shoulder.
Yes. Jillian is cutie and cuties is Jillian.
supposedly it's chinese but i'm chinese and the spelling of it has always been xie xie. not that way of spelling.
How are you in Chinese spelling basically is(你好吗?) 'ni hao ma?' :D
Jillian Michael's real name is (start dramatic music) ....................Jillian Michael!!
One less 'n' assuming you are trying to spell 'Chinese'
Jillian Bach's birth name is Jillian Rosenbach.
Jillian Dempsey's birth name is Jillian Fink.