Tag: Chinese Grammar

Chinese Grammar- Prepositional phrases 介词短语

The type "在…上" (zài…shàng) can express the position exactly where an action takes spot or perhaps a condition exists. The type在…上can also be employed to indicate scope or aspect when an abstract noun or verb is utilized in between. For instance,
他在楼上。tā zài lóushàng. [He is upstairs.]
他在班上的表现还是不错的。tā zài bān shàng de biǎoxiàn háishì bú cuò de. [He performed well in the class.]

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Chinese grammar: Advanced uses of 总zong

总 (zǒng) can often be simply translated as "always," but it has other advanced uses as well. It can express "no matter how long or under what circumstances, facts are facts." It can also express "no matter what." It is often paired with other words to form set phrases such as 总会, 总归, 总得, 总要, 总能, etc. It can also be structured together with other unconditional compound phrases like 无论 and 不管. You cannot place it directly after the verb.

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Chinese Grammar-Pronouns 汉语语法-代词

For example, there is no differentiation in the spoken language amongst "he", "she" and "it" (even though a written difference was launched following speak to with the West), and pronouns remain the same whether they are the matter or object of the sentence. Mandarin Chinese more lacks a distinction in between the possessive adjective ("my") and possessive pronoun ("mine"); both are formed by appending the particle “的” (de). 

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