I'm not getting your question, but let me just tell you a little bit about Chinese.
Chinese - No alphabets, as you might know.
The Chinese language cannot be written like English, because it contains only characters, therefore you can't just name someone's English name.
There is two ways to write Chinese:
Simplified and Traditional
The rest of china uses Simplified but only in Hong Kong and Taiwan uses Traditional.
Also Chinese can be written in many ways but still pronounced the same.
These here are some simplified words to the words next to it.
對 → 对; 觀 → 观; 風 → 风... so on
Chinese approximately have 1,500 dialects.
translate what?
You translate it from English into Chinese.
what are you doing
genesis
SDL FreeTranslation has everything you need for chinese translation. This is translate web pages and translate text from English to Chinese. For professional, human translations in Chinese see Click2Translate and get a qutoe.
A person can translate Chinese writing into English by using one of the many online translations websites. This can be done on 'Google Translate', 'Babylon' and 'MDBG'.
translate what?
You can copy and paste the Chinese characters into an online translation tool or use a translation app on your smartphone to convert the text into English. Alternatively, you can ask a friend or a colleague who is fluent in Chinese to help you with the translation.
One way to translate Chinese to English is to use Google Translate. To do this, simply go to Google Translate and type what is wanted to be translated between the two languages.
english to chinese
You translate it from English into Chinese.
what are you doing
genesis
"writing" in Chinese is "写(xiě) ".
SDL FreeTranslation has everything you need for chinese translation. This is translate web pages and translate text from English to Chinese. For professional, human translations in Chinese see Click2Translate and get a qutoe.
In Chinese Mandarinpinyin: YuCharacter:魚If you need to translate Chinese to English, you can ask the AnyTranscription for help.
Someone who speaks both.