Chinese Alphabet | 中文

Chinese uses a logographic writing system with thousands of characters. Simplified Chinese is used in mainland China and Singapore, while Traditional Chinese is used in Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, and overseas Chinese communities.

Ni
Hao
Wo
Shi
Ren
Da
Xiao
Zhong
Guo
Xue
Sheng
Lao
Shi
Jia
Zhang
Ai
Peng
You
Shi
Jian
Nian
Yue
Ri
Tian
Shui
Huo
Mu
Jin
Tu
Shan
He
Hai
Dong
西
Xi
Nan
Bei
Shang
Xia
Zuo
You
Qian
Hou
Lai
Qu
Chi
He
Kan
Ting
Shuo
Du
Xie
Zuo
Gong
Zuo
Shang
Ye
Yi
Sheng
Jiao
Shi
Ke
Xue
Yan
Jiu
Mei
Li
Cong
Ming
Jian
Kang
Kuai
Le
He
Ping
An
Fu
Xing
Yun
Cheng
Gong

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Understanding Chinese Letters

The Chinese alphabet has 80 letters. Chinese is a group of languages spoken by over 1. You will notice patterns pretty quickly once you stop trying to compare every shape to English.

Here is the key: this page gives you audio pronunciation for the letters, so you can connect each symbol to a real sound instead of guessing. Start small, repeat a few letters, then add more.

Quick starter set to look at right now: 你 好 我 是 人 大 小 中 国 学.

Chinese Pronunciation Guide

The fastest way to learn Chinese pronunciation is simple: tap audio, repeat, and copy the sound as closely as you can. If English is your first language, your brain will try to “auto-correct” new sounds into English. Don’t let it.

Start with the clearest sounds first. When a sound feels new, keep your mouth relaxed and repeat the audio a few times before you try to speed up.

Here are a few examples to practice: 你 (ni), like ni, 好 (hao), like hao, 我 (wo), like wo, 是 (shi), like shi. Listen once, repeat three times, then move on.

How to Write Chinese Letters

Learning how to write Chinese letters becomes much easier when you use your hand, not just your eyes. Copy one letter at a time, then write it again without looking.

This alphabet does not use uppercase and lowercase like English. Focus on consistent size, clean shapes, and steady spacing. Clear beats fancy.

Write left to right like English. Start with single letters, then try short letter groups to build flow.

The trick is to slow down for the first week. Once you get the hang of the shapes, speed comes naturally.

Learn Chinese Letters With Audio

Audio is your shortcut. Use it to train your ear and your mouth at the same time. A simple routine works: listen → repeat three times → write the letter five times.

Ten minutes per day is enough if you are consistent. Many learners discover that short daily practice beats long sessions once a week.

If you get stuck, do not guess. Tap the audio again, slow down, and try one more time.

Chinese Alphabet vs English

English uses the Latin alphabet, but spelling and pronunciation change a lot from word to word. With many alphabets, once you learn the core sounds, reading can feel more direct.

Chinese may use different letter shapes than English, even when it is written left to right. Focus on the sound and the symbol, not the English look-alikes.

When you learn the key sounds and practice with audio pronunciation, reading becomes much easier. Use the PDF, image, and worksheet downloads to keep practicing offline, then come back and test yourself with audio again.