Saturday, November 23, 2019
How to Count Above 10,000 in Chinese
How to Count Above 10,000 in Chinese Mandarin numbers up to 9,999 follow the same basic pattern as English numbers, but numbers 10,000 and higher are quite different. In English, numbers larger than 10,000 are stated in terms of thousands. However, large numbers are written and read as divisions of 10,000 in Chinese. Ten Thousand The Chinese character for 10,000 is è ¬ / ä ¸â¡ (traditional / simplified), pronounced wn. Any number higher than 10,000 read in terms of the number of 10,000s. For example, 20,000 would be å⦠©Ã¨ ¬ / ä ¸ ¤Ã¤ ¸â¡ (liÃŽng wn), or two ten-thousands. 17,000 would be ä ¸â¬Ã¨ ¬Ã¤ ¸Æ'Ã¥ Æ' / ä ¸â¬Ã¤ ¸â¡Ã¤ ¸Æ'Ã¥ Æ' (yà « wn qà « qià n), or one ten-thousand seven thousand. 42,300 would be Ã¥âºâºÃ¨ ¬Ã¥â¦ ©Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾ / Ã¥âºâºÃ¤ ¸â¡Ã¤ ¸ ¤Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾ (sà ¬ wn liÃŽng qià n sà n bÃŽi), or four ten-thousandà two thousand three hundred.à So on and so forth, any number from 10,000 up to 100,000,000 is constructed by the following pattern: number of 10,000snumber of 1,000snumber of 100snumber of tensnumber of ones If there is a zero in the hundreds, tens, or ones place, it is replaced by é⺠¶ là ng. If there are a series of zeros, as in 21,001, they are replaced by a single é⺠¶ là ng. Examples of Large Numbers Here is a list of more large numbers. Audio files are available and marked with ââ" º to help with pronunciation and listening comprehension skills. See if you can say the number out loud without looking at the Chinese version. Or, listening to the audio file and see if you can write out the number. 58,697ââ" ºwÃâ wn bà qià n lià ¹ bÃŽi jiÃâ shà qà «Ã¢â¬â¹Ã¤ ºâè ¬Ã¥â¦ «Ã¥ Æ'å⦠ç⢠¾Ã¤ ¹ Ã¥ ä ¸Æ'ä ºâä ¸â¡Ã¥â¦ «Ã¥ Æ'å⦠ç⢠¾Ã¤ ¹ Ã¥ ä ¸Æ'950,370ââ" ºjiÃâ shà wÃâ wn sà n bÃŽi qà « shà ä ¹ Ã¥ ä ºâè ¬Ã¤ ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾Ã¤ ¸Æ'Ã¥ ä ¹ Ã¥ ä ºâä ¸â¡Ã¤ ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾Ã¤ ¸Æ'Ã¥ 1,025,658ââ" ºyà « bÃŽi ling à ¨r wn wÃâ qià n lià ¹ bÃŽi wÃâ shà bà ä ¸â¬Ã§â¢ ¾Ã©âº ¶Ã¤ ºÅ'è ¬Ã¤ ºâÃ¥ Æ'å⦠ç⢠¾Ã¤ ºâÃ¥ å⦠«Ã¤ ¸â¬Ã§â¢ ¾Ã©âº ¶Ã¤ ºÅ'ä ¸â¡Ã¤ ºâÃ¥ Æ'å⦠ç⢠¾Ã¤ ºâÃ¥ å⦠«21,652,300ââ" ºliÃŽng qià n yà « bÃŽi lià ¹ shà wÃâ wn liÃŽng qià n sà n bÃŽiå⦠©Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â¬Ã§â¢ ¾Ã¥â¦ ä ºâè ¬Ã¥â¦ ©Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾Ã¤ ¸ ¤Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â¬Ã§â¢ ¾Ã¥â¦ ä ºâä ¸â¡Ã¤ ¸ ¤Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸â°Ã§â¢ ¾97,000,000ââ" ºjiÃâ qià n qà « bÃŽi wnä ¹ Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸Æ'ç⢠¾Ã¨ ¬Ã¤ ¹ Ã¥ Æ'ä ¸Æ'ç⢠¾Ã¤ ¸â¡ Even Larger Numbers After ten thousand, the next largest number unit used in Chinese is one-hundred million. One-hundred million in Mandarin Chinese is Ã¥ââ / ä º ¿ (ââ" ºyà ¬). It can also be expressed as è ¬Ã¨ ¬ / ä ¸â¡Ã¤ ¸â¡ (wn wn). Following are the series of numbers larger than one-hundred million. Each number is 10,000 times larger than the previous one. åžâ / Ã¥â¦â zho 1012ä º ¬ jà «ng 1016åžâ gà i 1020ç § zà 1024ç © ° rng 1028æ º / æ ²Å¸ gÃ
u 1032æ ¾â" / æ ¶ § jin 1036æ £ zhÃâng 1040è ¼â° / è ½ ½ zi 1044 Learning Tips Using numbers units like è ¬ / ä ¸â¡or Ã¥ââ / ä º ¿ can be confusing at first. Here are a few tips for quickly knowing how to read large numbers out loud. One tip is to move the comma one place to the left. A number is usually separated every three digits by a comma. For example: 14,000. Now, lets move the comma over by one digit. By seeing a number 1,4000, it becomes easier to read numbers in terms of ten-thousands. In this case, it isà ä ¸â¬Ã¨ ¬Ã¥âºâºÃ¥ Æ' /à ä ¸â¬Ã¤ ¸â¡Ã¥âºâºÃ¥ Æ', or one ten-thousand four thousand.à Another tip is to simply memorize a few large numbers. How do you say one million in Chinese? What about 10 million?
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