Hou pinyin

Hou's pinyin:

1, the first sound: haze;

2. The second sound, hóu: Hou, Bi, Bi, throat, throat, monkey, Bi, Bi, Bi, Bi, Bi, Bi, Bi, Bi.

3, the third voice: hey, hey;

4. The fourth "Hou": Hou, Fu, Hou, Fu, Hou, Fu, Wu, Hou, Fu, Fu, Fu, Fu, Fu, Hu, Hu.

Pinyin is the process of pinyin festival, that is, according to the rules of syllable formation in Putonghua, initials and finals are quickly and continuously spelled and combined with tones to form a syllable.

Hanyu Pinyin is a Latin Chinese character scheme of People's Republic of China (PRC), which was studied and formulated by the Hanyu Pinyin Scheme Committee of the former China Character Reform Committee during the period of 1955 to 1957 character reform. This pinyin scheme is mainly used to mark the pronunciation of Putonghua and Chinese as the phonetic symbol of Chinese characters.

The Fifth Session of the First National People's Congress of People's Republic of China (PRC) approved and announced the plan on February 1958+0 1.

1982, which became the international standard ISO7098. Some overseas Chinese areas, such as Singapore, use Chinese Pinyin in Chinese teaching. In September 2008, Taiwan Province Province of China decided to change the policy of Chinese Pinyin translation from "universal Pinyin" to "Chinese Pinyin", requiring all parts involved in Chinese-English translation to adopt Chinese Pinyin, which has been implemented since 2009. Chinese Pinyin is a tool to assist Chinese pronunciation.

Article 18 of the General Language and Characters Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates: "The Chinese Pinyin Scheme is a unified standard for spelling Roman letters in Chinese names, place names and Chinese documents, and it is used in areas where Chinese characters are inconvenient or unusable." The symbols written according to this set of norms are called Chinese Pinyin.

Chinese Pinyin is also an internationally recognized standard for Latin transliteration of Putonghua. The international standard ISO 7098 writes: "The Chinese Pinyin Scheme officially adopted by the National People's Congress of People's Republic of China (PRC) and China is used to spell Chinese. Transliterators record the pronunciation of Chinese characters in Mandarin. "