Difference between revisions of "Counting money"
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* 三 <em>块</em> 八 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">3.8</span> | * 三 <em>块</em> 八 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">3.8</span> | ||
− | * | + | * 十 <em>块</em> 两<em>毛</em> <span class="expl">10.2</span> |
− | * | + | * 九 <em>块</em> 五<em>毛</em> <span class="expl">9.5</span> |
− | * | + | * 一 <em>块</em> 七<em>毛</em> <span class="expl">1.7</span> |
− | * | + | * 五 十 <em>块</em> 五<em>毛</em> <span class="expl">15.5</span> |
− | * | + | * 七 十 二 <em>块</em> 四<em>毛</em> <span class="expl">72.4</span> |
− | * | + | * 一 百 <em>块</em> 五 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">100.5</span> |
− | * | + | * 五 百 <em>块</em> 三 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">500.3</span> |
− | * | + | * 两 千 两 百 <em>块</em> 两 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">2000.2</span> |
− | * | + | * 三 千 一 百 <em>块</em> 一 <em>毛</em> <span class="expl">3100.1</span> |
</div> | </div> | ||
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<div class="liju"> | <div class="liju"> | ||
− | * 三 <em>块</em> 八<span class="trans">Three kuai eight</span> | + | * 三 <em>块</em> 八<span class="trans">Three kuai eight</span> |
− | * | + | * 十 <em>块</em>二<span class="trans">Ten kuai two</span> |
− | * | + | * 九 <em>块</em>五<span class="trans">Nine kuai five</span> |
− | * | + | * 一 <em>块</em>七<span class="trans">One kuai seven</span> |
− | * | + | * 五十 <em>块</em>五<span class="trans">Fifty kuai five</span> |
− | * | + | * 七十二 <em>块</em>四<span class="trans">Seventy-two kuai four</span> |
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 07:16, 8 November 2013
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Keywords
Cash rules everything around us, and in China there's no exception. Mastering how to say quantities of money is vital!
Structure
Chinese has a specific structure for talking about quantities for money:
Number + 块 + Number + 毛
Examples
- 三 块 八 毛 3.8
- 十 块 两毛 10.2
- 九 块 五毛 9.5
- 一 块 七毛 1.7
- 五 十 块 五毛 15.5
- 七 十 二 块 四毛 72.4
- 一 百 块 五 毛 100.5
- 五 百 块 三 毛 500.3
- 两 千 两 百 块 两 毛 2000.2
- 三 千 一 百 块 一 毛 3100.1
If the smaller units are only in tens, you can just say the number of tens. So 3.86 RMB is "三 块 八"。而且这种说法一般只用于100以内的事。
- 三 块 八Three kuai eight
- 十 块二Ten kuai two
- 九 块五Nine kuai five
- 一 块七One kuai seven
- 五十 块五Fifty kuai five
- 七十二 块四Seventy-two kuai four
The first number is the amount of whole RMB (or dollars etc.), and the second is the amount smaller units (e.g. cents). So 3.86 RMB is
- 三 块 八 毛 六3.86
And if there's no smaller unit, e.g. 3 RMB, you can just say:
- 三 块Three kuai
块 is the more common, informal way to talk about money. More formally you can use 元 in exactly the same way. This is similar to the difference between "dollars" and "bucks" in American English, or "pounds" and "quid" in British English. 块 is appropriate in more situations than "bucks" or "quid", though.
See also
Sources and further reading
Books
- A Practical Chinese Grammar For Foreigners (外国人实用汉语语法) (pp. 88-9) →buy
- Integrated Chinese: Level 1, Part 1 (3rd ed) (pp. 233-4) →buy