Mandarin
卫生纸 or "Hygiene/hygienic paper" (literal translation)
卫生: Wei sheng (hygiene/hygienic)
纸: Zhi (paper)
Hope it helps
2007-01-15 11:16:53
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answer #1
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answered by warasouth 4
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Paper In Chinese
2016-11-13 21:36:43
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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What a good idea. I always hate having to pee into a cup to give a urine test. I bet women find it even more bothersome to do so. It obvious, from the article, that these toilets were designed for use in hospitals where thousands of urine samples are taken each day. Given that the ageing older Japanese public have the money to spend on healthcare, medical problems given their age would be a concern. Can Chinese bathroom fixture companies catch up, I don't know, is there a swatting version out on the market?
2016-03-17 23:55:25
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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ahahahha!!!
"kita Cakita" is a mexican joke. Means "cleaning-poo" kita (quita) Cakita (caca's diminutive).
Well,
Toilet paper in chinese is:
手纸【shǒuzhǐ】"paper in the hand" Or,
卫生纸【wèishēngzhǐ】
(手紙 in japanese means letter, but its pronunciation is Tegami "Paper in the hand" hahaha!)
Ok, good luck!
2007-01-15 08:29:42
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answer #4
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answered by 日本男 Nippon Otoko 3
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yeah, it depends on who you're talking to. Chinese isn't a single spoken language. when you speak Chinese, you're speaking Mandarin, Taiwanese, Cantonese... all of which are totally different. so it depends.
2007-01-15 08:50:01
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answer #5
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answered by andrea 2
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you WRITE 'toilet paper' in chinese, you say it in cantonese, mandarin etc
2007-01-15 08:34:07
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answer #6
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answered by James D 2
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the way i pronunce it in cantonese is 'chee gee'
2007-01-15 12:31:06
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answer #7
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answered by swtbabykiiss 3
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as far as what it looks like...
衛生紙
卫生纸
how you say it...?
2007-01-15 08:07:12
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answer #8
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answered by adg_libra 2
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i dont know
2007-01-15 08:01:30
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answer #9
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answered by stargirl 2
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