Posted June 3, 2014 三 (san) (3) Yes, I'm learning what number is which and how to spell it. Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 Four. I would have thought typing it out would help better, but each to their own. Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 五 (go) (5) I'm pasting the symbol, at least. I know go is 5. And ichi is 1. Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 6 (roku) Oooh, Japanese. Learning kanji's gonna be tricky, if it's anything like traditional Chinese (which it is. Kinda). Hiragana's easier, I believe. Phonetics and all that. Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 1 (ichi) Meh, I'm only learning simplified Chinese. I did have to learn a bit of traditional to understand our textbooks last year though. I mean, I am living in China now. Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 二 (ni) (2) From zero to three are easy. Zero is a circle. Or a complicated thing. One, two, and three all are just lines... Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 一 (ichi) 一つ (hitotsu) 一つ目 (hitotsume) 一番目 (ichibanme) Those are all different versions of '1.' Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 二 貳 弐 貮 贰 These are all different versions of 2. (pronounced same in Korean. [이]) Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 True. But the simple ones are easier to write/type, save for 〇. Much easier to find 零 when typing. 1 (ichi) Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 I agree. But sometimes simple letter are removed. Example. "亖" This was four. (which doesn't use now.) Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 1 (itchy nose) It'd be pretty confusing if you were writing numbers vertically and you had bad handwriting 一 二 三 亖 Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 (edited) Google's a pain, and it literally broke everything, so 2. Ni. Edited June 3, 2014 by seacatsmew Share this post Link to post
Posted June 3, 2014 (edited) 六 (roku) (6) Edited June 3, 2014 by seacatsmew Share this post Link to post
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