Format Chinese, Japanese or Korean text in Keynote on Mac
You can enter text in many different languages, including several different writing systems for Chinese, Japanese and Korean, using the international keyboards available on your Mac. Keynote provides some language-specific text-formatting features, including emphasis styles, list styles and phonetic guides.
For best results, use these recommended fonts:
Simplified Chinese: PingFang SC
Traditional Chinese for Taiwan: PingFang TC
Traditional Chinese for Hong Kong and Macao: PingFang HK
Korean: Apple SD Gothic Neo
Japanese: Hiragino Sans (sans serif) or Hiragino Mincho (serif)
Important: The instructions below assume you set up at least one Chinese, Japanese or Korean keyboard on your Mac. To set up international keyboards, choose Apple menu > System Settings, then click Keyboard in the sidebar. (You may need to scroll down.) Go to Text Input, click Edit, then click to add a new language.
Add Chinese or Japanese emphasis marks
You can add emphasis marks that are commonly used with Chinese or Japanese text. For example, using a Chinese keyboard, you can apply Boten dots below or above the text, or a wavy underline. With Japanese text, you can add plain dots or sesame dots.
Go to the Keynote app on your Mac.
Open a presentation, then switch your keyboard to a Chinese or Japanese keyboard.
Select the characters you want to format, then in the Format sidebar, click the Text tab.
Click the Style button near the top of the sidebar, then click an emphasis mark button.
The formatting options depend on which keyboards are set up.
Use a Chinese, Japanese or Korean list style
You can apply Chinese, Japanese and Korean list styles (specifically, the bullet style or numbering system) to a list written in any language.
Go to the Keynote app on your Mac.
Open a presentation, then select the list items with the numbering or lettering you want to change.
In the Format sidebar, click the Text tab, then click the Style button near the top of the sidebar.
Click the pop-up menu next to Bullets & Lists and choose Numbered.
Click the disclosure arrow next to Bullets & Lists (to open it), click the pop-up menu above Tiered Numbers, then choose a number or letter sequence.
The formatting options depend on which keyboards are set up.