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Arenas129
Is there any difference between Chinese, China's, of China and China? - -||
I use the first three randomly, would it change the meaning?
And I also see the China tea,China rose so forth, where I suppose the meaning of "China" is "Chinese"... O_o
24 de oct. de 2012 4:21
Respuestas · 7
2
Chinese(形容词) = 中国人(chinese person),中文 (chinese language ),中菜(chinese cuisine)
China's(所有格) = 中国的
of China(所有格) = 中国的
China = 中国
24 de octubre de 2012
1
Chinese ( adjective) - Chinese boys ,Chinese architecture, Chinese premier,etc.
Chinese( noun) - The Chinese ( refers to people).
China's (possessive) - China's boundaries, China's economy. China's army,etc.
Of China - Again used to denote possession - The boundaries of China, the literacy rate of China
Yes, "China" means " Chinese" in the examples you have mentioned above.
'china' is also a synonymous reference to cutlery,Chinese ceramics and tableware.
25 de octubre de 2012
Yus, yet I mean the adjective of chinese.. and Cantonese is more like a dialect in China..
24 de octubre de 2012
it represents ;;;
24 de octubre de 2012
@Rena
'Chinese' is not a language.Mandarin and Cantonese are some of the languages spoken in China. The same is applicable to India . 'Indian' is not a language, but English,Hindi,Malayalam,Telugu and Tamil are come of the languages spoken in India.
24 de octubre de 2012
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Arenas129
Competencias lingüísticas
Chino (mandarín), Inglés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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