ni zai gan ma
The Mandarin phrase "ni zai ganma ne" translates to "What are you doing?" in English.
I think you mean how do you write in using Mandarin characters ? 住 在 zhu zai = to live (in )
You would say "我在中国" in Mandarin, which is pronounced "wǒ zài zhōngguó".
In Mandarin Chinese, "goodbye" is pronounced as "zàijiàn" (zai-jian).
In Mandarin, you can say "再见" which is pronounced as "zài jiàn" to say bye bye.
In Mandarin, you can say "洗手间在哪里?" (xǐshǒujiān zài nǎlǐ?) to ask where the bathroom is.
I think you mean how do you write in using Mandarin characters ? 住 在 zhu zai = to live (in )
You would say "我在中国" in Mandarin, which is pronounced "wǒ zài zhōngguó".
zai jian
xian zai
再 zai 见 jian (pronounced zi (long i) jyan)
In Mandarin, you can say "再见" which is pronounced as "zài jiàn" to say bye bye.
To say Hello is Ni hao And to say goodbye is Zai jian
In Mandarin, you can say "洗手间在哪里?" (xǐshǒujiān zài nǎlǐ?) to ask where the bathroom is.
掰掰 (bye bye) or 再見 (zai jian)
The "z" in "zai" is not pronounced like the "dge" in "judge. It is more like the z in "zebra" but there are a few differences, the "z" in "zai" is pronounced more strongly, and the upper and lower teeth bite together tighter.
"Ni hao" means hello or hi in Chinese, while "zai jian" means goodbye. So together, "ni hao zai jian" is a way to say both hello and goodbye.
Goodbye