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Zhijian is the Pinyin spelling of a number of different Chinese given names.These names are also spelled Chih-chien in the Wade–Giles romanisation common in Taiwan, and Chi-kin in typical Hong Kong Cantonese spelling (though some names with that spelling would be pronounced Zijian in Mandarin).
The format "writing-mode:tb-rl" has been revised as "writing-mode: vertical-rl" in CSS, but the former syntax was preserved as a part of SVG 1.1 specification. Among Web browsers, Internet Explorer was the first one that had been supporting vertical text and layout coded in HTML.
Pan-Unicode: intended to globally support the majority of Unicode's characters, and not specifically designed for one or a few writing systems (note that Pan-Unicode font ≠ Unicode font [Note 2]) Pan-CJK: intended to support the majority of Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters, and not specifically designed for any one of these writing systems
Written Chinese is a writing system that uses Chinese characters and other symbols to represent the Chinese languages.Chinese characters do not directly represent pronunciation, unlike letters in an alphabet or syllabograms in a syllabary.
他 Tā He 为/為 wèi for 他的 tā-de he- GEN 朋友 péngyǒu friend 做了 zuò-le do- PERF 这个/這個 zhè-ge this- CL 工作。 gōngzuò. job 他 为/為 他的 朋友 做了 这个/這個 工作。 Tā wèi tā-de péngyǒu zuò-le zhè-ge gōngzuò. He for he-GEN friend do-PERF this-CL job 'He did this job for his friends.' The predicate can be an intransitive verb, a transitive ...
Chinese characters "Chinese character" written in traditional (left) and simplified (right) forms Script type Logographic Time period c. 13th century BCE – present Direction Left-to-right Top-to-bottom, columns right-to-left Languages Chinese Japanese Korean Vietnamese Zhuang (among others) Related scripts Parent systems (Proto-writing) Chinese characters Child systems Bopomofo Jurchen ...
Where there is more than one parameter in use in a given article, an {{Infobox Chinese}} template can be used instead of {{}}.This removes the characters, romanization and pronunciations from the opening sentence, thus making it more readable while keeping it accessible to readers; see {{Infobox Chinese/doc}} for how to use it.
Simplified Cangjie, known as Quick (Chinese: 速成或簡易) is a stroke based [1] keyboard input method based on the Cangjie IME (Chinese: 倉頡輸入法) but simplified with select lists.