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When it is Chinese, it is countable, but singular and plural are Chinese, such as one Chinese, two Chinese, when it is the meaning of Chinese, it is uncountable.
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If it refers to "Chinese", then it is a countable noun, but the singular and plural forms are the same.
If it refers to "Chinese", it is an uncountable noun.
Interpretation: Chinese English [ t a ni:z ] 美 [ t a niz, -nis].
n.Chinese; Chinese; Chinese; Chinese;
adj.Chinese; Chinese; Chinese; Chinese;
Example sentence] the chef, staff and managers are all Chinese
The chef, staff and manager are all Chinese.
the names are direct borrowings from the chinese.
These names are imported directly from the Chinese language.
the chinese should make a greater contribution to mankind.
Chinese should make greater contributions to mankind.
he has just learned the rudiments of chinese.
He is just getting started with learning Chinese.
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Completely uncountable.
As China, China capitalized, there is one China in the world.
Seat porcelain, China initials lowercase, also uncountable.
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Making porcelain, porcelain, porcelain products, porcelain is an uncountable noun.
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China as a porcelain is an uncountable noun.
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If it means Chinese, it is uncountable, and there is also a meaning of "Chinese".
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It can be counted, but both singular and plural are the same.
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cake is a countable noun as follows:
cake English [ke k] American [ke k]nCake; Cake; lumps; Sediment.
vt.& vi.(make) agglomeration; (make) glue; Example sentence with a thick layer: The cake baking in the oven made the whole house fragrant
Cakes baked on the stove fill the room with a fragrant smell.
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cake is countable when it denotes fractions, e.g. two cakes, but cake is uncountable when it denotes the general term of cakes.
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It depends:
1. If it refers to "Chinese", it is a countable noun, but the singular and plural forms are the same: such as: a Chinese two Chinese
2. If it refers to "Chinese", it is an uncountable noun, such as: he knows a little Chinese[can't use a few].
Chinese is usually used as a noun in three ways:
Means Chinese (Chinese Chinese): My major is ChineseMy major is Chinese.
Means Chinese: i am a ChineseI am a Chinese.
Speak Chinese, Chinese: can you speak Chinese?Do you speak Chinese?
For example: although i am a Chinese who can speak Chinese fluently, I choose Chinese as my major to learn it better
Although I am a Chinese who speaks fluent Chinese, I chose to major in Chinese to learn Chinese better.
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There is no counting, because Chinese is a collective term for Chinese.
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No. It's not a noun, it's actually an adjective of nationality.
A Chinese can only do this:
he is chinese.
i'm chinese.
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Yes, for example, as a Chinese you can say as a Chinese
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Chinese is used as an adjective most of the time, and a Chinese person can say a Chinese, but generally say a Chinese person. So the plural is two Chinese people.
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Chinese singular and plural numbers are all the same
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