I can mostly understand your statements (after RoomAndBored’s correction) but not so much your questions. I should learn some basic Chinese grammar sometime.
Subscribed, thanks for the link! I have a feeling my grammar is at best that of a toddler, but I’m having a ton of fun learning, and this thread has taught me a lot!
You are the best! Those were some of the characters I hadn’t been able to get it to display easily. When I’ve noticed it using the wrong character(which I often just don’t notice yet), I’ve often had to resort to googling the pinyin and copying the character.
Hello, I am xxx, I am (doing?) Chinese language. How are you? Do you speak (something)? Do you have any (something something 我 something something something)?
That gives me a great perspective on how to sound more natural, and some characters to learn too, thank you again!!
It's a way to turn any action into a question. It could be a more casual and informal, more endearing /soft way of questioning something (depending on the actual emotional tone you say it with, if course) .
It might take me a bit to get back to everyone. I’m trying to translate the comments without machine assistance, and some words I don’t know yet, so I need to do more studying first!
Don't worry, not understanding is the first step! I can't believe you translated my post. You flatter me haha.
because you don't have a fried who is a native speaker, I really suggest using the app "hello-talk" and getting the foreign version of "we-chat". Hello-talk is a monetized to hell and back but there are many many native speakers looking to practice English. So using that to find some people who you can vibe with and then talking with them on we-chat is how I made my language partner (and now great friend) who I've known for going on 3 years. I think this is important as otherwise you might chat with me and even though it's passable sometimes I'm still going to teach you the mistakes I make when speaking or writing. Besides living in China, I think this method is the best and, moreover, then you maybe have some one to meet when you visit.
Side note: I think your progress is remarkable for one month. It's very impressive work! 加油!💪
Thank you. Is it common to ask someone how they are before you introduce yourself? Here it would be seen as either small talk, or as if you didn’t care to know the answer to the question in the first place, since you immediately spoke after asking.
I was worried about using 我是because i didn’t know if there was a specific nuance around screen names Vs actual names, so I figured “call me BartsBigBugBag” covered that base effectively lol.