Dutch ki te Hainamana Whakamāoritanga

NL ZH Ko nga hua tere Kei te wātea te API

Ka whakamāoritia... Ka puta tēnei te whakamāoritanga...

Ka whakaingoatia te whakamāoritanga.

Ka waihanga i tētahi kāwanatanga wātea hei whakamāori i ngā tuhinga, ngā tuhipānui, me ētahi atu.

Ka tāuru i te wātea Ka tāurutia te tāurunga

He pēhea te whakawhiti i te Dutch ki te Chinese

1
Ka tāuru i ōna kupu

Ka tuhituhi, ka tāpoi rānei i tōna kupu Dutch ki roto i te pātengi tāuru i runga ake nei. Ka taea e koe te tāuru tae atu ki te 10,000 ngā tohu, te tāurunga rānei i tētahi tuhinga.

2
Ka tirohia te whakawhitinga

Ka kōwhiria te pihi Whakamāori, e tūmanako ana rānei - ka tīmata te whakamāori aunoa i muri i ta koe i te whakamutu i te tuhituhi. Ka tātaritia e te AI tōna kupu i roto i ngā milliseconds.

3
Ka tārua ōna whakamāoritanga

Ka puta haere tonu tōna whakamāoritanga Chinese. Ka pā ki te ctrl tārua hei tārua ki tōna papatuhi, hei whakauru rānei mā tātau API.

Ko ngā kīanga pūnoa Dutch

Tirohia tētahi rerenga kia whakamāoritia ai i te wā kotahi.

Ka whakamāoritia te whakawhitinga

Ki te whiwhi Dutch ki ngā whakamāoritanga Chinese i roto i ngā millisekona.

Tūtohu tautoko

Whakataki i te Wā, PDF, SRT subtitle me ētahi atu mō te whakamāoritanga rōpū.

Ka āhei ki te API

Ka whakaurua tēnei takirua whakamāoritanga ki ōna taupānga me tātau REST API.

Dutch ki te API Chinese

E tāpiri ana tēnei takirua whakamāoritanga ki tōna taupānga me tētahi whakarongo API māmā.

Tirohia ngā tuhinga API Kitenga te kī API
curl -X POST https://api.translateapi.ai/api/v1/translate/ \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"text": "Hello", "source_language": "nl", "target_language": "zh"}'

Mo te whakamāoritanga o Dutch ki Chinese

E whakarato ana te TranslateAPI i te whakamāoritanga tere me te tika o Dutch ki te Chinese e whakahaua ana e te AI arā atu anō. E tautoko ana tātau ratonga:

  • Ka whakamāoritia te kupu - Ka whakamāoritia ētahi kupu tae noa ki te 10,000 ngā pūāhua
  • Ka whakamāoritia te tuhinga - Whakapupuri i te Wā, PDF, me ngā faila kupu mō te whakamāoritanga
  • Ko te whakaurunga API - Tāpiri i te whakamāoritanga Dutch ki te Chinese ki ōna taupānga
  • Ka whakamāoritia - Ka whakamāori i ngā kupu maha i roto i tētahi tono kotahi
Ka whakamahia ngā take:
  • Ka whakamāoritia ngā tuhinga Dutch ki te Chinese mō te umanga
  • Ka whakawātea i ngā pūnaewele me ngā taupānga mai i te Dutch ki te Chinese
  • Ka tahuri ngā tuhipoka Dutch ki te Chinese
  • E whakawhitiwhiti ana ki ngā kaikōrero Chinese
He takirua whakamāoritanga
Mātāmua
Dutch (nl)
Tūtohu
Hainamana (zh)

E pā ana ngā pātai

CJK ↔ Latin translation faces three distinct challenges: word-segmentation in the CJK source (no spaces), kanji / hanzi ambiguity (one character → multiple readings), and English noun-phrase compounding. The model is trained on bilingual corpora that handle all three; expect roughly 90-93% professional-grade accuracy for Dutch ↔ Chinese.

For Chinese-side output the default is simplified hanzi (the standard in Mainland China and Singapore). Pass the explicit code zh-TW or zh-HK if you need traditional characters for Taiwan / Hong Kong audiences.

Japanese output uses the conventional kanji + hiragana + katakana mix: kanji for content words and inflectional stems, hiragana for grammatical particles and verb endings, katakana for foreign loanwords and emphasis. The model picks the right script context-by-context.

Yes — output Hangul is always composed (NFC-normalized syllable blocks, not decomposed jamo). Mixed Hangul + Hanja (Sino-Korean characters) is supported when the target convention calls for it (legal, academic, classical text).

For Chinese: the simplified-vs-traditional pair is fixed by the language code, and pinyin readings are not exposed in the output by default. For Japanese: the model uses on'yomi vs kun'yomi based on context; name furigana (above-the-line reading hints) is preserved if it was in the source.

Yes — CJK punctuation marks (。 , 、 : ; ! ? "..." 「」 『』 ()) are emitted in the script-appropriate full-width form. Latin output gets standard half-width punctuation. The width is set per output, not carried from input.

Person names follow the convention of the target audience: Eastern names (Last First) stay in that order for CJK output and flip to First-Last for English. Place names use the most-common English spelling (Beijing not Peking, Tokyo not Tōkyō). Company names use the spelling on the company's own English-language site.

When translating INTO Japanese or Korean, the model defaults to the polite formal register (です/ます for Japanese, 합니다 for Korean) which is the safe choice for business and technical content. Casual or sonkeigo/keigo (elevated honorific) registers need explicit hints in the source.

Chinese and Japanese have no inter-word spaces; Korean has them. When translating from a Latin-script source the model adds spaces correctly for Korean output and omits them for Chinese/Japanese output. The reverse direction handles segmentation automatically.

Code blocks (anything inside triple-backticks or <code> tags) pass through unchanged. Inline code spans (single-backtick) also stay literal. Identifier-style terms (camelCase, snake_case, file paths) are preserved; comment prose around them is translated.

Technical accuracy for Dutch ↔ Chinese is highest in software, e-commerce, and consumer-electronics domains where bilingual corpora are abundant. Specialist legal and medical content benefits from glossary-augmented translation (POST the glossary as a sidecar to the API).

CJK languages encode roughly 1.7-2x more meaning per character than English, so a 5,000-character English source typically produces 2,800-3,400 characters of CJK output. The 10,000-character per-request limit on the web translator is character-counted on the source side.

Ko ētahi atu kōwhiringa whakamāori

He nui ake mai i te Dutch

Ka whakamāoritia te Dutch ki ētahi atu reo

Tirohia ngā ūnga katoa
Whakamāoritanga whakarerekē

Ka whakawhitinga mai i te Chinese ki te Dutch

Hainamana → Dutch
E whakawātea ana i tēnei pou
Mahalo mo ōna arotakenga!
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