Saturday, 12 October 2019

Chinese Measure Words




Measure words can be difficult in Mandarin Chinese because of the large amount of variations. Different objects could be discussed. Measure words exist in English, such as “piece of cake” or “stick of gum.” In Chinese, each noun requires a measure word. For example, you need to say “five (measure word) cats.”

Here are some common measure words in Mandarin Chinese:

个 gè

This is a generic measure word that you can use in place of measure words that you do not know. Examples for “个 gè” include: 三个人 sān gèrén (three people),  一个苹果  yīgè píngguǒ (one apple). 

间 jiān

This is a measure word that is used to describe any sort of room, from bedrooms to classrooms. For example: 一间客房 yī jiàn kèfáng (one guest room), 四间教室 sì jiān jiàoshì (four classrooms). 

棵 kē

“棵 kē” is used when when talking about plants or trees. You would say “三棵树 sān kē shù
” when talking about three trees. 

双 shuāng

When you are talking about pairs of things, the measure word “双 shuāng” is used. So four pairs of shoes would be “四双鞋 sì shuāng xié” and one pair of chopsticks is “一双筷子 yīshuāng kuàizi”. 

张 zhāng

To talk about pieces of paper, or anything flat, you will use “张”. This can be tricky because nouns such as paper, bed, and tickets all fall into this category. Examples include: 两张票 liǎng zhāng piào (two tickets), 一张床  yī zhāng chuáng (one bed), and 三张纸 sān zhāng zhǐ (three sheets of paper). 

支 zhī

This measure word is used to refer to twig-like objects or long objects such as pens and pencils. You would say “一支铅笔 yī zhī qiānbǐ” for “one pencil”.

只 zhī

Another common measure word that you will see describing animals or if you are talking about one of a pair is “只 zhī”. Note that this is pronounced “zhī” and not “zhǐ” like in other contexts. Examples include: 两只鸡 liǎng zhī jī (two chickens), 一只鞋 yī zhǐ xié (one shoe). These measuring words can begin to get extremely complicated. There are many different characters for various categories. Every Chinese noun needs a measure word. If you make a mistake, people probably could still understand what you are talking about.

2 comments:

  1. I had some success memorizing Chinese measure words on a nudiustertian day.

    Nudiustertian (Adjective. Of or relating to the day before yesterday; very recent.)

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  2. I would have to repeat some of these Chinese words many times before I completely memorized them. Remember, repetition is the key to success.

    Before you get the meaning, the words might have looked like gobbledygook (weird language that is meaningless or is made unintelligible by excessive use of abstruse technical terms; nonsense)

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