中文語(yǔ)序 Chinese word order 101
The Beijinger 2024-01-10 16:22
Many Chinese learners struggle with word order (語(yǔ)序, yǔ xù) when they are trying to make sentences in Chinese. Even some advanced students make grammatical mistakes (語(yǔ)法錯(cuò)誤, yǔ fǎ cuò wù) from time to time, which is why it is extremely important to help beginners and intermediate students gain a solid understanding of word order in Chinese sentences. This article should help you get a general idea about some of the most basic Chinese sentence structures concerning word order.
What's the basic sentence structure? (基本句子結(jié)構(gòu), jī běn jù zi jié gòu)
If you try to compare the most basic Chinese sentence structure with its equivalence in English, it can be easily seen that both of them follow the structure "subject + verb + object." (主謂賓,zhǔ wèi bīn)
A good example of this structure could be the following sentence:
我學(xué)中文。
wǒ xué zhōngwén
I'm studying Chinese.
In this simple sentence, "我 (wǒ) = I" serves as the subject, whereas "學(xué) xué, to study" and "中文 zhōng wén, Chinese" represent the verb and the object respectively.
How to add time? (如何加入時(shí)間, rú hé jiā rù shí jiān)
If you would like to add a time-related element to this sentence, such as "I study Chinese in the morning", the word order of its Chinese version will be a bit different.
Generally speaking, the time-related element like five o'clock or every day cannot be put at the end of a sentence, which is what is different compared with an English sentence. It usually goes either before or after the subject, and that means it is allowed to be placed at the beginning of a sentence.
Therefore, there are two ways to say "I study Chinese in the morning":
我早上學(xué)中文 wǒ zǎo shàng xué zhōng wén OR 早上我學(xué)中文 zǎo shàng wǒ xué zhōng wén
The word 早上 zǎo shàng "morning," can either come before or after the subject.
How to add location? (如何加入地點(diǎn), rú hé jiā rù dì diǎn)
If you want to specify where you study Chinese, for example, "I study Chinese at school", the location is usually put after the subject, similar to the structure discussed above.
Hence, its equivalence in Chinese should be:
我在學(xué)校學(xué)中文 wǒ zài xué xiào xué zhōng wén, in which "學(xué)校 xué xiào" means school, and it represents the location.
How to add time and location? (如何加入時(shí)間和地點(diǎn), rú hé jiā rù shí jiān hé dì diǎn)
Finally, when you would like to include both a time-related element and a location into a sentence, which would be something like "I study Chinese at school in the morning," one important thing that you need to bear in mind is that the time-related element always comes before the location, and all the other rules remain the same.
Therefore, the whole sentence in Chinese would be:
我早上在學(xué)校學(xué)中文 wǒ zǎo shàng zài xué xiào xué zhōng wén OR 早上我在學(xué)校學(xué)中文 zǎo shàng wǒ zài xué xiào xué zhōng wén
It's important to familiarize yourself with these structures as they will allow you to have a clearer idea about the logic behind simple Chinese sentences.
Soon enough, you'll be making progress creating your own sentences if you know these structures by heart.
來源:The Beijinger
編輯:萬(wàn)月英