Difference between revisions of "Complement"

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Complements are a a special type of structure found in modern Mandarin which follow verbs (or sometimes adjectives) and provide additional information.  They can be as short as one character, or practically as long as a sentence.  According to [http://www.amazon.cn/mn/detailApp?_encoding=UTF8&tag=allset-23&linkCode=as2&asin=B001J0ADWA&camp=536&creative=3132&creativeASIN=B001J0ADWA A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners], complements "show the duration, quantity, degree, result, direction or possibility of an action; or to illustrate the state, number, degree of a thing"<ref>[http://www.amazon.cn/mn/detailApp?_encoding=UTF8&tag=allset-23&linkCode=as2&asin=B001J0ADWA&camp=536&creative=3132&creativeASIN=B001J0ADWA A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners], p. 271</ref>.  The Chinese word for complement is 补语 (bǔyǔ).
 
Complements are a a special type of structure found in modern Mandarin which follow verbs (or sometimes adjectives) and provide additional information.  They can be as short as one character, or practically as long as a sentence.  According to [http://www.amazon.cn/mn/detailApp?_encoding=UTF8&tag=allset-23&linkCode=as2&asin=B001J0ADWA&camp=536&creative=3132&creativeASIN=B001J0ADWA A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners], complements "show the duration, quantity, degree, result, direction or possibility of an action; or to illustrate the state, number, degree of a thing"<ref>[http://www.amazon.cn/mn/detailApp?_encoding=UTF8&tag=allset-23&linkCode=as2&asin=B001J0ADWA&camp=536&creative=3132&creativeASIN=B001J0ADWA A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners], p. 271</ref>.  The Chinese word for complement is 补语 (bǔyǔ).
  
Complements are not a form of flattery (those are compliments)<ref>For more info on this common mistake, see [http://grammar.about.com/od/words/a/complement.htm this website].</ref>; they're much more versatile than that!  But because complements have no exact counterpart in English, they can be a little bit difficult to get the hang of at first. As is often the case, plentiful examples will help clarify!
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Complements are not a form of flattery (those are compliments)<ref>For more info on this common mistake, see [http://grammar.about.com/od/words/a/complement.htm this website].</ref>; they're much more versatile than that!  But because complements have no exact counterpart in English, they can be a little bit difficult to get the hang of at first. As is often the case, plentiful examples will help clarify.
  
 
== Summary of complement types ==
 
== Summary of complement types ==

Revision as of 03:44, 1 August 2011

Complements are a a special type of structure found in modern Mandarin which follow verbs (or sometimes adjectives) and provide additional information. They can be as short as one character, or practically as long as a sentence. According to A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners, complements "show the duration, quantity, degree, result, direction or possibility of an action; or to illustrate the state, number, degree of a thing"[1]. The Chinese word for complement is 补语 (bǔyǔ).

Complements are not a form of flattery (those are compliments)[2]; they're much more versatile than that! But because complements have no exact counterpart in English, they can be a little bit difficult to get the hang of at first. As is often the case, plentiful examples will help clarify.

Summary of complement types

Below you'll find all the major complement types (as well as some of the minor ones), with representative examples of each. The first four (result complement, potential complement, direction complement, and degree complement) are the critical ones. Click on the complement names for more detailed explanations and plenty of additional examples.

Main Complement Types, with Examples
Type of ComplementVerbComplementEnglish
Result complementto finish doing
to see
to buy (successfully)
计划to plan (properly)
清楚to speak clearly
Potential complement不了cannot go
得了can go
不到cannot hear
得见can see
不懂to (listen but) not understand
得懂to be able to read and understand
得完can finish eating
Direction complementto put down
上去to walk up
回来to fly back (here)
过来to look (over) this way
Degree complement得很好to speak (very) well
好*极了great
累*死了great
脏*得不得了terribly dirty
State complement得很简单to think very simply
得很乱to make a mess (of things)
Quantity complement一次to go once
工作十个小时to work for 10 hours
Location complement在北京to live in Beijing
到中国to come to China
Time complement到明年to wait until next year
于69年to be born in '69

* OK, these are adjectives, not verbs!

Composition of complements

You might be wondering: what is the complement, exactly? For example, is it another verb, or an adjective or what? The answer is that it varies. It can be a verb, an adjective, a prepositional phrase, a measure word phrase, or a long, complex phrase. The following chart breaks it down.

Structure of Complements
Word Preceding ComplementComplement ContentComplement TypesExample
VerbVerbResult complement做完
Potential complement看得懂
Direction complement走回来
AdjectiveResult complement做好
State complement想得很简单
Prepositional phraseLocation complement住在北京
Time complement生于69年
Measure word phrasesQuantity complement去一次
AdjectiveAdjectiveDegree complement做完
Result complement做好
AdverbDegree complement好极了
Result complement做好
Other phraseState complement响得让人发疯

References

  1. A Practical Chinese Grammar for Foreigners, p. 271
  2. For more info on this common mistake, see this website.

Sources and further reading