九 月 十 六 日 是 马 夹 西 亚 日。 Anyone can u teach me how to reconstruct this sentences..which one should come first? The year..month ..anyone???
What is it that you trying to say, in English?
That should be right in a sentence since it directly translates to September 16 is Malaysia day.
guididgfcyuodgsfhiudshfcuedfrefrfreeeeeeeeeg
jiu3 ri2 shi2 liu4 ri4 shi4 ma3 lai2 xi1 ye4 ri4 I guessed, I think that's right. lol
@pooja195
^
*ri4
I just translated it into pinyin. :P
I know mandarin :D
@Conqueror The second one isn't ri4. It's yue4
Jiǔ yuè shíliù rì shì mǎjiā xī yà rì. would be the pinyin for your sentence as for the dates thing of it this way it would always be the largest to smallest Year then Month then Day
You know Chinese? @sleepyhead314 :O
Or... Just Google Translate? :/
Google translate of course. >.>
It was google translate because I am illiterate but I am actually fluent in speaking Mandarin Chinese @AnswerMyQuestions
Me too. :P
really @shifuyanli lol
what??! haha
DO NOT USE GOOGLE TRANSLATE! I have been learning Mandarin for 3 years now and during this whole time my teacher keeps stressing us to never use Google translate. Translating from Chinese to English is slightly more accurate, but going from English to Chinese is completely wrong and if you use Google translate for this purpose then any native speaking person will not be able to understand your Chinese.
The year goes first, then the month, then the date. You say the number of the year, then the character for year which is nian(2) 年 Then you say the month which is a number and the character for month which is yue(4) 月 Then the date which is the number and character for day which- in the case of writing down the date- is either ri(4) 日 or hao(4) 号 If you want to also include the day of the week then that would go at the end of the sentence after a comma. The character for week is said first, which is - xing(1) qi(2) 星期, followed by the day of the week which is usually a number.
For example. Today's date in characters is: 二零一五年一月三十日, 星期天 In pinyin it is: er(4) ling(2) yi(1) wu(3) nian(4) yi(1) yue(4) san(1) shi(2) ri(4), xing(1) qi(2) tian(1)
haha I know I know @UsaChan<3 :P I just use the Google translate for chinese characters to pinyin which is perfect ^_^
in chinese you always start or use STPVO.
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