The Chinese were able to print using woodblock printing, where characters were carved onto wooden blocks and then inked for printing. This method allowed for the reproduction of entire pages at a time, making it suitable for the Chinese language with its numerous characters.
While the Chinese writing system was imported into Japan and formed the basis of Japanese writing, the origin of the Japanese language is less certain. Its roots may have been brought to Japan by settlers from continental Asia or from nearby Pacific islands. The Japanese language is not part of the same language family as Chinese, although a large portion of the modern vocabulary is borrowed from Chinese.
Though they are not really "letters" but instead characters, the Asian languages such as Chinese have the most characters, hence making it one of the hardest languages to learn.
the tibetan language is most closely related to burmese.the tibetan script/alphabet is indic in origin.the tibetan language and Chinese languages are very different in grammar.tibetan sentence order being Subject-Object-Verb and Chinese being Subject-Verb-Object.although tibetan and Chinese do share a handful of words in common,just like how Chinese and Korean share some words in common,tibetan should not be classified with Chinese.Korean is also not classified in the Chinese language family.Korean is a language isolate,meaning it does not belong to a language family although some scientists suggest an altaic origin.Korean and other altaic languages have the same sentence order as tibetan i.e SOV.these altaic speaking peoples are mostly nomadic like the tibetans and mongols. currently tibetan is classified in the "sino-tibetan" language family even though the tibetan and Chinese language have nothing in common besides a few words.the CCP uses this classification to justify its occupation on Tibet.
The main Chinese languages are Mandarin, Cantonese, and Min. Mandarin is the most widely spoken and is the official language of China. Cantonese is predominantly spoken in Hong Kong and Guangdong province, while Min is spoken in Fujian province.
"Manderin" is likely a misspelling of "mandarin," which can refer to a high-ranking official in imperial China, the Chinese language spoken in Beijing and northern China, or a small citrus fruit. Can you please clarify which definition you are referring to?
NO ! Chinese, Spanish, Arabic, and others are still widely used ( though English is popular)
Yes. They use han yu pin yin, and that is made up of letters, even though the language uses symbols.
Only in that China is located on the continent of Asia. Not all Asians are Chinese. But all Chinese are Asian. It's an ethnic group and nationality, sharing a language (though many different dialects), and culture.
While the Chinese writing system was imported into Japan and formed the basis of Japanese writing, the origin of the Japanese language is less certain. Its roots may have been brought to Japan by settlers from continental Asia or from nearby Pacific islands. The Japanese language is not part of the same language family as Chinese, although a large portion of the modern vocabulary is borrowed from Chinese.
Yes, this is a possible scenario that some people choose. More practical though, is to double major in Linguistics plus a language, and then take a 3rd language as an elective.
Youll have to be more specific with "Asian" Chinese - many dialects, but the mainland Chinese speak Mandarin Chinese. Japanese - speak Japanese, but write in many ways like Kanji for example Taiwanese/Hong Kong people - Cantonese or Mandarin Chinese Most Asian countries speak Mandarin though.
Chinese language having highest no of letter as compare to others, even though above question having any comparison between other languages so elobrate clearly :)
Though they are not really "letters" but instead characters, the Asian languages such as Chinese have the most characters, hence making it one of the hardest languages to learn.
the tibetan language is most closely related to burmese.the tibetan script/alphabet is indic in origin.the tibetan language and Chinese languages are very different in grammar.tibetan sentence order being Subject-Object-Verb and Chinese being Subject-Verb-Object.although tibetan and Chinese do share a handful of words in common,just like how Chinese and Korean share some words in common,tibetan should not be classified with Chinese.Korean is also not classified in the Chinese language family.Korean is a language isolate,meaning it does not belong to a language family although some scientists suggest an altaic origin.Korean and other altaic languages have the same sentence order as tibetan i.e SOV.these altaic speaking peoples are mostly nomadic like the tibetans and mongols. currently tibetan is classified in the "sino-tibetan" language family even though the tibetan and Chinese language have nothing in common besides a few words.the CCP uses this classification to justify its occupation on Tibet.
A conductor is a material which contains movable electric charges. In metallic conductors, such as copper or aluminum, the movable charged particles are electrons, though in other cases they can be ions or other positively charged species.
If you're referring to Mandarin Chinese (usually what spoken Chinese refers to), it is spoken in the whole country of China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia. And if your referring to Cantonese, it is used around China just like mandarin. It is spoken in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. Chinese is also spoken world-wide, as with many languages. Though Chinese isn't an official language in, for example, America, it can be heard spoken in America. It's also taught around the world, so the language spreads.
They have similarities, because Japanese written language is mostly based on Chinese. The Japanese use around 2000 symbolic characters called Kanji, which each represent a full word or concept and are directly borrowed from Chinese. Unlike Chinese though they also have a phonetic text which can be written two ways depending on the exact word. These are called Katakana and Hiragana, and are more of an alphabet-based way of writing things, useful for imported words.