around 3000 characters
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
there is actually on 'the' in the Chinese language. and unless you use pingyin, you can't really 'spell' it - it's all Chinese characters
There is not an equivalent of alphabetical order for the Chinese language. They do not use letters. Instead, they use characters that are called logograms.
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, if you wrote "twelve" in Chinese, it would be "十二." This is pronounced "shi2er4" in Hanyu Pinyin and "shyrell" in Gwoyeu Romatzyh.
They use a kind of system which includes thousands of Chinese characters, suah as 我=I, 你=You which are used to form complete sentences.
Around or over 50,000 characters exist in the Chinese language.
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
Many other Asian countries use Chinese characters. One is Japan (although they have both a syllabary and an alphabet that they use too).
Currently the Chinese characters we mentioned are simplified Chinese characters, from a practical standpoint, we should learn simplified characters, traditional Chinese characters can be understood as an interest. Characters include pronunciation, font, meaning, only read the correct pronunciation, recognize the font, understand the meaning, you can really grasp a character. There are many applications that you can use to learn Chinese characters, such as MagiChinese.
Actually, 'please' is not used that much in everyday Chinese. If you use it as much as you would in English, you will sound overly polite! However, the translation is qing3, or as written in Chinese characters, 请
The Chinese language is written using characters, each representing a word or a syllable. There are thousands of characters in total, but only around 3,000 are commonly used in everyday communication. These characters can be combined to form words and sentences.
Many other Asian countries use Chinese characters. One is Japan (although they have both a syllabary and an alphabet that they use too).
the simplified is an easier way to write the characters. in Taiwan, they usually use the traditional. this is happy in simplified 快乐, this is happy in traditional 快 樂. you can see the traditional has more strokes in the second character.
there are over 80,000 characters, but many are no longer in use or are obscure terms not used in every day life. Chinese, however, will have an indefinite amount of characters, as there is no limit on what characters may be formed. It is, after all, a living language, meaning it changes with time, just like English and other languages today.
there are no English letters in china, they use characters.
The Chinese language is written in characters, not "letters" as in English. If you're asking about how many different characters there are in the Chinese language, Wikipedia states that as of 2004, the latest Chinese dictionary has 106,230 characters, and sometimes, one character may have multiple meanings when used in different contexts.
the mother conflict with dee's new life