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Quiz about Mandarin Chinese 101 Numbers
Quiz about Mandarin Chinese 101 Numbers

Mandarin Chinese 101: Numbers Trivia Quiz


My second lesson/quiz on basic Chinese. Today we will be learning about numbers and things to do with numbers in Mandarin Chinese.

A multiple-choice quiz by Vy_lette. Estimated time: 3 mins.
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Author
Vy_lette
Time
3 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
272,052
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
1249
Last 3 plays: Guest 176 (5/10), Guest 101 (4/10), Guest 110 (4/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. Let's start at the beginning. One. How do you say 'one' in Chinese? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Harry, Ron, and Hermione are three good friends. How would you say 'three' in Chinese? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Fred asked if he could borrow 'yi bai yuan'. How much did he ask to borrow? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. There are three ways to say two in Chinese.


Question 5 of 10
5. Ginny bought nineteen unicorn hairs for school. In Chinese, how many unicorn hairs did Ginny buy? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. In Chinese, 'hundred thousand' can be represented by one character or one word.


Question 7 of 10
7. What is the translation for the 'point' used when speaking about decimal points? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. There is a formal and informal way to write Chinese numbers. (This is not to be confused with differences between simplified and traditional characters.)


Question 9 of 10
9. Percent and fractions are said in the same format in Chinese.


Question 10 of 10
10. Simple math: 'Yi _____ yi deng yu er.' What goes in the blank? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 12 2024 : Guest 176: 5/10
Apr 11 2024 : Guest 101: 4/10
Apr 10 2024 : Guest 110: 4/10
Apr 06 2024 : Guest 70: 2/10
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Mar 28 2024 : Guest 203: 5/10
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Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Let's start at the beginning. One. How do you say 'one' in Chinese?

Answer: Both are correct

'Yi' is the most commonly used word for 'one'. 'Yao' is used in telephone numbers as well as on CB radios to make sure you don't confuse it with 'seven' which is 'qi'. Contrary to stories, 'yao' was NOT started as a tribute to Yao Ming.
2. Harry, Ron, and Hermione are three good friends. How would you say 'three' in Chinese?

Answer: san

Er' means 'Two'. 'Wu' is five. 'Qi' is 'seven'.
3. Fred asked if he could borrow 'yi bai yuan'. How much did he ask to borrow?

Answer: one hundred yuan

Though China's currency's formal name is 'ren min bi', most people will just use the word 'yuan'. Yuan is spelled the same in both English and in the romanization of Chinese. 'One thousand' is 'yi qian'. 'Ten' is 'shi'. And, 'one' is 'yi'.
4. There are three ways to say two in Chinese.

Answer: True

The three ways of saying "two" in Chinese are "er", "liang", and "lia". "Er" and "liang" are two easily confused characters. When counting, you say "er" when "two" is alone or after another number, like in these cases: "one, two, three..." (yi, er, san in Chinese) or "thirty-two" (san shi er). "Liang" is used for "two" when "two" appears before another number, such as: "two hundred" (liang bai) or "two thousand" (liang qian). "Liang" is also only used for counting, for instance "two chickens" (liang ge ji), whereas "er" can also mean "second", as in "the second floor" (di er ceng). "Lia" is a contraction of "liang" and "ge", and is generally used in speech when talking about "those two (people)" or "two people" (lia ren). "Lia" is used specially when informally talking about two people; you never say "two pairs of chickens" as "lia zhi ji". Such a case would use "liang", as mentioned above.

In addition, each character is written differently.
5. Ginny bought nineteen unicorn hairs for school. In Chinese, how many unicorn hairs did Ginny buy?

Answer: shi jiu

If you can count to ten in Chinese, you have all you need to know to count to ninety-nine. Eleven to nineteen is simply 'ten one' ('shi yi') for eleven, 'ten two' ('shi er') for twelve, 'ten three' ('shi san') for thirteen, etc. If you said it the other way around, 'two ten' would be 'Twenty' which is 'er shi', 'three ten' or 'thirty' is 'san shi', 'four ten' or 'forty' is 'si shi', etc. For all the other numbers, you just place it all together as you normally would in English. Example: 'ninety-eight' ('nine ten eight') is 'jiu shi ba'. For the incorrect answers, 'shi ba' is 'eighteen', 'shi liu' is sixteen, and 'shi si' is fourteen.
6. In Chinese, 'hundred thousand' can be represented by one character or one word.

Answer: False

There is no single character for 'hundred thousand'. However there is a character for 'ten thousand' which is 'wan'.
7. What is the translation for the 'point' used when speaking about decimal points?

Answer: dian

Gou' means 'check' as in check mark. 'Jiao' means 'angle'. And, 'du' means 'degree'.
8. There is a formal and informal way to write Chinese numbers. (This is not to be confused with differences between simplified and traditional characters.)

Answer: True

It is easy to change some numbers to another with informal characters. When writing checks, contracts or other documents where fraud is possible, there is a set of formal characters that are used so that someone can not just add a stroke or two to change the numbers.
9. Percent and fractions are said in the same format in Chinese.

Answer: True

A percent is simply a fraction with a denominator of 100. In Chinese, you always say the denominator first. So, 'three-fourth' would be said 'si fen zhi san'. 'Fen zhi' means 'parts of'. For percent, it would be the same thing but, there is no need to use the one before the hundred. 'Seventy-nine percent' would be 'bai fen zhi qi shi jiu'.
10. Simple math: 'Yi _____ yi deng yu er.' What goes in the blank?

Answer: jia

Yi' means 'one'. 'Deng yu' means 'equals'. 'Er' means 'two'. Knowing this, the statement is translated to 'One ____ one equals two.' so, 'add' should go into the blank. 'Jia' is 'add'. 'Jian' is 'subtract'. 'Cheng' is multiply. 'Chu' means 'divide'.
Source: Author Vy_lette

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor trident before going online.
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