Chinese speakers use the same number system as Westerners, especially when writing larger numbers like 2011. Even in the middle of a sentence of Chinese characters, they will usually write an Arabic numeral rather than the Chinese characters for it. However, Chinese does have characters for writing out the numbers, just like you can write "five" instead of 5 in English. Here they are, from 1 to 10:
一
二
三
四
五
六
七
八
九
十
Cantonese or mandarin??? cmon ppl...
ten thousand seconds
I can count to ten in French: Je peux compter jusqu'à dix en français.
ee, er, san, si, wu, liu, chi, ba, goe, shir.
In Mandarin Chinese, 24 is said as "èr shí sì" (二十四). The first part, "èr," means two, "shí" means ten, and "sì" means four, so it literally translates to "two ten four."
Mandarin has no alphabet. It is made of of different characters.
It takes exactly ten seconds to count to ten in ten seconds.
Ten Count was created on 2008-07-27.
Count to Ten - album - was created in 2007.
The duration of Count to Ten - film - is 1.67 hours.
English, (American)
to count to ten is 'compter jusqu'Ã dix' in French.
Count to Ten - film - was created on 1985-05-02.
I learned how to count to ten when I was around three years old.
Cantonese or mandarin??? cmon ppl...
In Singapore, you can count to ten in English as follows: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. Additionally, Singapore is a multicultural society, and you might also hear numbers in Mandarin, which would be: yī, èr, sān, sì, wǔ, liù, qī, bā, jiǔ, shí. Other languages like Malay and Tamil are also spoken, but English is widely used for counting.
The cast of At the Count of Ten - 1916 includes: Sidney Drew