How to say "lay off" in Chinese?

In Chinese "lay off" translates to  裁员 

Transliteration: cái yuán

🇨🇳 由于经济原因,我们需要裁员。

🗣️ Yóu yú jīng jì yuán yīn, wǒmen xū yào cái yuán.

🇺🇸 Due to economic reasons, we need to lay off employees.



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🇨🇳

Chinese

Native speakers
918M 🗣️
Official language in
3 countries 🌍
Active vocabulary
5k-10k 📚
Difficulty
difficult 🤔
Closest langauges
Cantonese, Shanghainese
⏳ Avg. time to basics
1100-1300 hours ⏳

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Learning Chinese offers unparalleled access to the world's second-largest economy and one of its oldest civilizations. China's global influence in sectors like technology, trade, and politics makes Mandarin a strategic asset. For basic fluency, English speakers require about 2,500-3,500 unique characters and could expect to spend 1,300-2,200 hours to reach general proficiency due to the complexity of the writing system and tones. Key grammar aspects include understanding tones, measure words, and sentence particles like 'le' for tense. Simplified grammar rules counterbalance the language's challenging script and pronunciation. Mastery of Chinese unlocks diverse professional opportunities and deep cultural insights.



Frequently Asked Questions

How to say "lay off" in Chinese?

You can use the word "裁员" which translates to "lay off".

How to pronounce "裁员" (lay off) in Chinese?

The word "裁员" is pronounced as "cái yuán".

Do you have an audio recording on how to pronounce" 裁员" (lay off) in Chinese?

Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.