Unlike the English alphabet, there is no ABC order for Chinese characters. If one were to list them all, then it would take a while since researchers say there are over 80000 Chinese characters.
you should give the characters
It really depends on the length of words you're using but generally 1 word is equal to 5 characters. So 5,000 characters would be roughly 1,000 words. Most word processing software has a word count feature which would give you an exact number.
1=一 (yi) 2=二 (er) 3=三 (san) 4=四 (si) to write the character four in Chinese you have to type "si" and then it will give you the option of the window with the curtains or some other characters. :) -Charmeia
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. :)
Yes she did
you should give the characters
The Chinese alphabet also known as 'Mandarin Phonetic Symbols' in Chinese is '注音符号'. In pinyin it is 'zhu yin fu hao'. Another name for it is the first four characters of the alphabet... 'bo po mo fo' or 'ㄅㄆㄇㄈ' The Chinese alphabet is rarely used outside Taiwan. And in Taiwan it is only used to teach children the proper pronunciation of Chinese characters. It consists of 37 letters and four different tones. Proper mixture of up to three letters and one tone will give you the proper pronunciation of any Chinese character.
In Chinese, "Hoy" does not have a specific meaning as it is not a standard word in the language. However, it could be a transliteration or a name. The meaning of any Chinese term often depends on the characters used, as Chinese is a tonal language with characters that can have multiple meanings. If you provide the characters or context, I can give you a more accurate interpretation.
Mandarin Chinese is the most common, most popular dialect of Chinese. Chinese is written in characters, with unique strokes to form a word. There are eight different stroke types. There are traditional and simplified characters. Simplified characters are not as complex as the earlier traditional characters, with a lesser amount of strokes. Chinese characters originally were modeled after animals, people, or other tangible objects. Many still resemble these things. For a visual, a simple google images search on Chinese Characters will provide a multitude of examples.This is how we write I love you in Chinese For example:我愛你 is I love you.
can u give me the whole sentences? 这只 or 这支 is both ok. means this one in English. U just study Pinyin right now, are u going to learn Chinese Characters too? It is better to learn Chinese Characters because u will not so easy to get confused by the pinyin, u know the same pinyin may have hundreds of Chinese Characters and each Chinese Characters has different meanings ,so pinyin is just one way to help pronunciation.
It differs in many ways. Here are a few.One: Traditional Chinese uses completely different written characters.Two: Chinese spoken language makes use of different intonations to give different meanings to words. So the way your voice changes in pitch and tone as you say a word will give it a completely different meaning.Three: Chinese has many different dialects, which some consider to be almost entirely different languages (despite sharing the same written characters). Mandarin is the most common and is the official dialect of China, but Cantonese and others are also very common, especially in certain countries/regions.
what would you change in order to make characters narrower and give text a tall, thin appearance
It gives the meaning of words.
It really depends on the length of words you're using but generally 1 word is equal to 5 characters. So 5,000 characters would be roughly 1,000 words. Most word processing software has a word count feature which would give you an exact number.
Glossaries tend to give the words in alphabetical order but it depends onthe author's preference.
'Give me' in Chinese is written as '给我'. It is pronounced or written in pinyin as 'gei wo'.
1=一 (yi) 2=二 (er) 3=三 (san) 4=四 (si) to write the character four in Chinese you have to type "si" and then it will give you the option of the window with the curtains or some other characters. :) -Charmeia