In its most basic form, Chinese word order is very similar to English word order. These similarities definitely have their limits, though; don't expect the two languages' word orders to stay consistent much beyond the very basic sentence orders outlined below.
A simple predicate can be just a verb. The most basic word order in Chinese is:
Subject | Verb | Translation |
---|---|---|
你们Nǐmen | 吃。chī. | You eat. |
他Tā | 笑。xiào. | He laughs. |
我Wǒ | 读。dú. | I read. |
你Nǐ | 去。qù. | You go. |
你们Nǐmen | 看。kàn. | You look. |
你Nǐ | 来。lái. | You come here! |
我Wǒ | 说。shuō. | I speak. |
孩子Háizi | 哭。kū. | Children cry. |
谁 Shéi | 要 学?yào xué? | Who wants to study? |
谁Shéi | 想 玩?xiǎng wán? | Who wants to play? |
A slightly longer predicate might be a verb with an object. A sentence with both a verb and an object is formed with this structure:
Subject | Verb | Object | Translation |
---|---|---|---|
他们Tāmen | 吃chī | 肉。ròu. | They eat meat. |
你Nǐ | 喝hē | 茶 吗?chá ma? | Do you drink tea? |
我Wǒ | 去qù | 学校。xuéxiào. | I go to school. |
他Tā | 说shuō | 中文。Zhōngwén. | He speaks Chinese. |
你Nǐ | 喜欢xǐhuan | 孩子 吗?háizi ma? | Do you like kids? |
我们Wǒmen | 要 买yào mǎi | 电脑。diànnǎo. | We want to buy a computer. |
你们Nǐmen | 想 吃xiǎng chī | 中国 菜 吗?Zhōngguó cài ma? | Do you want to eat Chinese food? |
我Wǒ | 爱ài | 你 和 爸爸。nǐ hé bàba. | I love you and dad. |
他们Tāmen | 要 做yào zuò | 什么?shénme? | What do they want to do? |
你Nǐ | 想 去xiǎng qù | 什么 地方?shénme dìfang? | What place do you want to go to? |
Despite the convenient word order similarities highlighted above, things start to break down as soon as you start adding in such simple sentence elements as the "also" adverb 也 (yě), a time word, or a location where something happened.
Don't worry; the more complicated Chinese structures aren't hard, they're just different! (If Chinese word order were really the same as English word order, that would be just a little too convenient, wouldn't it?)
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