Learn Trad Chinese

A yak teaches Traditional Chinese, pointing to a whiteboard that says Feelings Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese

Traditional Chinese Feelings Vocabulary: 90+ Words, Phrases, and Patterns

Traditional Chinese Feelings Vocabulary: 90+ Words, Phrases, and Patterns Learn emotions you can actually use: 繁體中文 characters, pinyin, clear meanings, and real-life examples you can copy. Topic title: 情緒與感受詞彙 Audio buttons speak Hanzi Soft + strong ways to say it Patterns for real conversations This list gives you feelings in Traditional Chinese (繁體中文) with pinyin […]

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A personified yak teacher pointing to a whiteboard that says Furniture Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese.

Furniture Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese: 80+ Easy Words & Phrases for Beginners

Furniture Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese Learn the words you actually need for shopping, describing, and surviving flat-pack furniture in Taiwanese Mandarin. 主題:家具詞彙(繁體中文) In this list, you’ll get Traditional Chinese (Hanzi), pinyin with tone marks, clear meanings, and real example sentences—so you can talk about furniture without sounding like a catalog. Tap the audio buttons to

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A personified yak teacher pointing to a whiteboard that says Valentine’s Day in Traditional Chinese.

Valentine’s Day in Traditional Chinese: 70+ Sweet Words & Flirty Phrases for Beginners

Valentine’s Day in Traditional Chinese 主題:情人節(Traditional Chinese) Includes:pinyin + examples + audio buttons Want Valentine’s Day vocabulary that actually works in real life (and in texts)? You’ll get Traditional Chinese characters, pinyin with tone marks, clear meanings, and example sentences you can copy without sounding like a greeting card from 1997. Tap the little audio

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A personified yak teacher pointing to a whiteboard that says Traditional Chinese Signs and Signage.

Traditional Chinese Signs and Signage: 80+ Real-Life Words & Phrases for Beginners

Signs and Signage in Traditional Chinese 標誌與告示(繁體中文) — read what’s around you, without squinting at Google Translate in public. This is your “I can actually function outside” list for signs in Taiwan-style Traditional Chinese. You’ll get the characters, pinyin with tone marks, plain-English meanings, and real example sentences. Tap the speaker buttons to hear the

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A personified yak teacher pointing to a whiteboard that says Playground Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese.

Playground Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese: 70 Easy Words & Phrases for Beginners

Playground Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese 主題:遊樂場/遊戲場詞彙(Traditional Chinese + pinyin + real sentences) Audio buttons speak zh-TW Beginner-friendly Useful at a park, not just in a textbook Here’s your playground survival kit: Traditional Chinese words with pinyin (tone marks), clear meanings, and short, real-life sentences you can copy. Tap the speaker buttons to hear Taiwan Mandarin

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An English-speaking yak teaches Traditional Chinese, pointing to a whiteboard that says Easter Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese

Easter Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese: 60+ Words You’ll Actually Use

Easter Vocabulary in Traditional Chinese: 60+ Words You’ll Actually Use Say it like a human: Easter words, pinyin, and real sentences. 主題:復活節詞彙 Quick Visual Cards Ready-to-Use Phrases Word Tables Useful Variants Want to talk about Easter without sounding like you swallowed a hymn book (or a greeting card)? Here are the most useful Easter words

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yak with “Popular Chinese Girl Names” and flower/name icons

Popular Girl Names In Traditional Chinese (女生名字 — Nǚshēng Míngzì)

Chinese names balance sound, meaning, and visual elegance. Most have a one-character surname followed by a one- or two-character given name. This guide focuses on Traditional Chinese usage common in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and many overseas communities, with a large bank of girl names in Traditional Chinese with pinyin immediately after and concise meaning notes.

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yak holding “Popular Chinese Boy Names” with name card icons

Popular Boy Names In Traditional Chinese (男生名字 — Nánshēng Míngzì)

Chinese names balance sound, meaning, and character aesthetics. Most use a one-character surname followed by a one- or two-character given name. Traditional Chinese (繁體) is standard in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and many overseas communities. Below is a practical guide to name structure, meanings, patterns, and a large bank of boy names in Traditional Chinese with

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yak with “Regional Words in Chinese” and globe icons

Regional/Other Words Used In Traditional Chinese (不是英法西語的那些外來語)

Chinese borrows from neighbors and far-off kitchens alike. Beyond English/French/Spanish, everyday Traditional Chinese is sprinkled with Japanese, Korean, Southeast/South Asian, Russian, German, Italian, Arabic–Persian—and a dash of Portuguese via trade. Below are high-frequency items seen on menus, storefronts, pop culture, and small talk. Entries show Traditional Chinese → pinyin → clean English gloss, with natural

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yak illustration with “Spanish Loanwords in Chinese” and Spanish symbols

Spanish Words Used In Traditional Chinese (西語外來語 — Xīyǔ Wàiláiyǔ)

From bakeries and cocktail menus to dance studios and football chatter, Spanish slips into Traditional Chinese more often than you’d think. This guide rounds up high-frequency items you’ll actually see in Taiwan—food and drinks, music and dance, place names, and everyday culture—with Traditional Chinese first, pinyin right after, and a clean English gloss. Where a

Spanish Words Used In Traditional Chinese (西語外來語 — Xīyǔ Wàiláiyǔ) Read More »