Traditional Chinese is a specific set of Chinese characters that does not contain any newly created characters or character substitutions performed after 1946. They're a written character set rather than a spoken language/dialect. Many places use traditional Chinese, including Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau.
Some Chinese people do speak French, particularly individuals who have studied the language or lived in French-speaking countries. Chinese students may also learn French as a foreign language in school. However, the majority of Chinese people do not speak French as their primary language.
Approximately 2.2% of the Australian population speak Chinese as their primary language at home.
Roughly 1.2 billion people speak Chinese as their first language, making it the most spoken language in the world.
You would write "I speak Chinese" in Chinese as "我会说中文" (Wǒ huì shuō Zhōngwén).
The vast majority of people in Beijing speak Mandarin Chinese, the official language of China. It is estimated that nearly 100% of the population in Beijing is able to speak Mandarin.
yes yes
I believe that tibetan people speak traditional chinese, so by theory noah in tibetan is 諾亞
People in Taiwan speak Chinese
No, Persian people never spoke Chinese.
The Chinese language. Just that the written form is the traditional form.
Traditional Chinese clothing was called hanfu
Some Chinese people do speak French, particularly individuals who have studied the language or lived in French-speaking countries. Chinese students may also learn French as a foreign language in school. However, the majority of Chinese people do not speak French as their primary language.
Chinese.
Because it's their native language.That's like asking why the French speak French or the English Speak English or the Chinese speak Chinese.
They speak manadarin, Chinese, Cantonese, and English
Approximately 2.2% of the Australian population speak Chinese as their primary language at home.
many peole there speak Chinese and eglish