A common way to form questions in Chinese is to first use a
verb in the positive, then repeat the same verb in
its negative form, similar to how in English we can say, "Do you have
money or not?" or "Have you or have you not been to the park?" This
sentence pattern feels a lot more natural in Chinese than those
admittedly awkward English equivalents, however.
Verb-Not-Verb
Structure
Verb + 不 + Verb
Examples
- 是 不 是 ? Shì bu
shì?Is it (or not)?
- 他们 来 不 来 ? Tāmen lái bu
lái?Are they going to come or
not?
- 你 想 不 想 我 ? Nǐ xiǎng bu
xiǎng wǒ?Do you or do you not miss
me?
- 我们 要 去 酒吧, 你 去 不 去?Wǒmen
yào qù jiǔbā, nǐ qù bu qù?We
are going to the bar. Do you want to go?
- 我 去 买 咖啡 ,你 要 不 要 ? Wǒ qù
mǎi kāfēi, yào bu yào?I'm going
to buy coffee. Do you want some?
Note that the question provides the listener with both possible answers:
it's either "Verb" or "不 (bù) Verb."
Verb-Not-Verb with an Object
Structure
If you want to add an object after the verb, the general sentence
structure is:
Subj. + Verb + 不 + Verb + Obj.
Examples
- 你 回 不 回 家? Nǐ huí bu
huíjiā?Are you coming back home or
not?
- 她 吃 不 吃 鱼? Tā chī bu
chī yú?Does she eat fish?
- 你们 要 不 要 米饭? Nǐmen yào bu
yào mǐfàn?Do you want rice?
- 你爸爸 喝 不 喝 酒? Nǐ bàba hē
bu hējiǔ?Does your dad drink alcohol
or not?
- 今天 老板 来 不 来 办公室?Jīntiān
lǎobǎn lái bu lái bàngōngshì?Is
the boss coming to the office today?
Adjective-Not-Adjective
Structure
It can also be done with adjectives (adjectives
often behave like verbs in Chinese):
Adj. + 不 + Adj.
Examples
- 好 不 好 ?Literally, "good or not
good?"Hǎo bu
hǎo?Is it good?
- 热 不 热 ?Rè bu
rè?Is it hot?
- 他 帅 不 帅 ?Tā shuài bu
shuài?Is he handsome?
- 这里 的 咖啡 贵 不 贵 ? Zhèlǐ de
kāfēi gùi bu gùi?Is the coffee
expensive here?
- 中国 菜 辣 不 辣 ? Zhōngguó cài
là bu là?Is Chinese food
spicy?
Again, the question provides the listener with both possible answers:
it's either "Adjective" or "不 (bù) Adjective."
These are something like adding tag questions in English, in this case
"Are you an adult or not?" If you wanted to translate it very literally,
it would be, "Are you or are you not an adult?" In any case, the
structure is a very common way to ask questions in Chinese.
Two-Character Verbs and Adjectives
All of the verbs used so far have been single-character verbs. Using
two-characters verbs in affirmative-negative questions is slightly
trickier. You usually put 不 (bù) after just the first character, then
put the entire verb. For example 喜不喜欢 (xǐ bu xǐhuan) is the usual
question form of 喜欢 (xǐhuan). You can repeat the whole two-character
verb twice, but it's more common (and more elegant) to insert 不 (bù)
after the first character (and the same is generally true of
two-character adjectives).
Structure
It can be done with verbs:
[First Character of Verb] + 不 + Verb
It can also be done with
adjectives:
[First Character of Adj.] + 不 + Adj.
Examples
- 喜欢 不 喜欢?whole word
repeatedXǐhuan bu
xǐhuan?Do you like it?
- 喜 不 喜欢?only the
first character repeatedXǐ bu
xǐhuan?Do you like it?
- 高兴 不 高兴?whole word
repeatedGāoxìng bu
gāoxìng?Are you happy?
- 高 不 高兴?only the
first character repeatedGāo bu
gāoxìng?Are you happy?
- 他 女朋友 漂亮 不
漂亮?whole word
repeated Tā nǚpéngyou piàoliang bu
piàoliang?Is his girlfriend
pretty?
- 他 女朋友 漂 不
漂亮?only the first
character repeatedTā nǚpéngyou piào
bu piàoliang?Is his girlfriend
pretty?
- 中国 菜 好吃 不
好吃?whole word
repeatedZhōngguó cài hǎochī bu
hǎochī?Is Chinese food good?
- 中国 菜 好 不 好吃?only
the first character repeatedZhōngguó cài
hǎo bu hǎochī?Is Chinese food
good?
- 那 个 地方 好玩 不
好玩?whole word
repeatedNàge dìfang hǎowán bu
hǎowán?Is that place fun?
- 那 个 地方 好 不
好玩?only the first
character repeated Nàge dìfang hǎo
bu hǎowán?Is that place fun?
有 (yǒu) Is a Special Case
Structure
Because the verb 有 (yǒu) is negated with 没
(méi) and not 不 (bù), the
structure for affirmative-negative questions with 有 (yǒu) is:
Subj. + 有 没有 + Obj.
The possible answers are: "有 (yǒu)" or "没有 (méiyǒu)."
The questions could be be asking about current possession ("Do you have
it or not?"), or to ask about verbs in the
past ("Did you do it
or not?").
Examples
- 你 哥哥 有 没有 女 朋友?Nǐ gēge
yǒu méiyǒu nǚpéngyou?Does your
older brother have a girlfriend?
- 你们 有 没有 孩子? Nǐmen yǒu
méiyǒu háizi?Do you have
children?
- 奶奶 有 没有 坐 过 飞机? Nǎinai
yǒu méiyǒu zuò guo fēijī?Has
grandma been on a plane?
- 他 有 没有 上 过 大学?Tā yǒu
méiyǒu shàng guo dàxué?Has he been
to college?
See also
Sources and further reading
Videos
Books
Category:A1 grammar points