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Power Business Communications offers a comprehensive
Chinese translation service, translating a wide range of
documents from English into Chinese and from
Chinese into English. The translations are translated by
experts whose native language is the target language.
Our Chinese translation service has been
designed to completely satisfy all the needs of our clients because
our experts have all been selected for their command of their native
language as well as for their know-how in specialist areas.
"You can take our word for it"!
If you still aren't convinced, have a look at the statistics
below
Chinese population on Internet
Out of a total of 1,298,847,624, it is estimated 87 M
people go online in mainland China, according to
CCNIC
(July, 2004). Hong Kong represents another 4.9 M (
Nielsen/NetRatings
, Aug., 2004). One must also add 8.8 M in Taiwan (
ITU
, Dec., 2003) and 2.14 M people in Singapore online (Source:
ITU
: Dec., 2003).
ITU
estimates 8.7 M Malaysians online (2003), where Mandarin
Chinese is spoken by one-third of the population. There are another
1.5 M
Americans
who access the Internet in Chinese. This gives a total of
110 M Chinese-speaking people online.
Chinese: Statistics
1,298,847,624 in mainland China (2004), 70% of the
population, including 8,602,978 Hui (1990 census). Other estimates
for Hui are 20,000,000 or more. 1,042,482,187 all Han in China (1990
census). Population total in all countries 874,000,000 - first
language speakers: 1,052,000,000, including second language speakers
(1999 WA).
Chinese speaking regions
Covers all of mainland China north of the Changjiang
River, Hubei except the southeastern corner, a belt south of the
Changjiang from Qiujiang (Jiangxi) to Zhenjiang (Jiangsu), ,
Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou, the northwestern part of Guangxi, and
the northwestern corner of Hunan. Also spoken in Brunei,
Cambodia, Indonesia (Java and Bali), Laos, Malaysia
(Peninsular), Mauritius, Mongolia, Philippines, Russia (Asia),
Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, United Kingdom, USA, Vietnam.
Alternate Names for Chinese Language
MANDARIN, GUANHUA, BEIFANG FANGYAN, NORTHERN CHINESE,
GUOYU, STANDARD CHINESE, PUTONGHUA.
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Chinese Dialects
HUABEI GUANHUA (NORTHERN MANDARIN), XIBEI GUANHUA
(NORTHWESTERN MANDARIN), XINAN GUANHUA (SOUTHWESTERN MANDARIN),
JINGHUAI GUANHUA (JIANGXIA GUANHUA, LOWER YANGZE MANDARIN).
Chinese Language Details
Written Chinese is based on the Beijing dialect, but has
been heavily influenced by other varieties of Northern Mandarin.
Putonghua is the official form taught in schools. Hezhouhoua is
spoken in the Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture and Gannan Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture of southern Gansu Province, and in neighboring
areas in Qinghai Province. The grammar is basically Altaic or
Tibetan, while the vocabulary and phonology is basically
Northwestern Mandarin, or a relexified variety of Tibetan. More
investigation is needed. Putonghua is inherently intelligible with
the Beijing dialect, and other Mandarin varieties in the northeast.
Mandarin varieties in the Lower Plateau in Shaanxi are not readily
intelligible with Putonghua. Mandarin varieties of Guilin and
Kunming are inherently unintelligible to speakers of Putonghua.
Taibei Mandarin and Beijing Mandarin are fully inherently
intelligible to each other's speakers. The Hui are non-Turkic,
non-Mongolian, Muslims who speak Mandarin as first language. Hui is
a separate official nationality. The Hui correspond ethnically to
'Khoton', 'Hoton', or 'Qotong' in Mongolia, 20,000 Muslim Chinese in
Taiwan, and the Hui in Thailand. Several hundred Chinese Jews in
Kaifeng city, Henan Province are largely assimilated to the Han or
Hui Chinese, and speak Mandarin. They are officially recognized.
Official language in China, Singapore and Taiwan.
Official language taught in all schools in Han China and Taiwan.
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