{| style="border-spacing:0;width:28.519cm;" |- style="background-color:#d0d0f0;border:none;padding:0.049cm;" || |- |} {| style="border-spacing:0;width:6.712cm;" |- style="border:none;padding:0.049cm;" || Show {| style="border-spacing:0;width:2.708cm;" |- style="border:0.75pt double #808080;padding:0.053cm;" || characterspinyin, zhuyintranslations |- |} || || in {| style="border-spacing:0;width:3.21cm;" |- style="border:0.75pt double #808080;padding:0.053cm;" || text tooltips status line separate wordlist |- |} || |- |} {| style="border-spacing:0;width:7.542cm;" |- style="border:none;padding:0.049cm;" || Link characters to online dictionariesOnly treat the first occurrence of each wordInclude links to |- |} {| style="border-spacing:0;width:28.519cm;" |- style="background-color:#d0d0f0;border:none;padding:0.049cm;" || {| align="center" style="border-spacing:0;width:9.315cm;" |- style="border:none;padding:0.049cm;" || audio text-to-speechtooltips require DHTML; status-line requires a willing browser |- |} |- |} == Grammar notes == === 嗎? === One of the most common ways of forming a question in Chinese is to add 嗎 at the end of a statement. Hence 你好! (Hi!) becomes 你好嗎? (How are you?) === 你呢? === This is to be used to redirect the question originally addressed to you. Its meaning is equivalent to "and you?" "what about you?" or "how about you?"