Difference between revisions of "Placement of question words"
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
| when || 什么时候 || shénme shíhou | | when || 什么时候 || shénme shíhou | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | why || 为什么 || wèishénme | + | | why || 为什么 || <span class="spaced">wèishénme</span> |
|- | |- | ||
| how || 怎么 || zěnme | | how || 怎么 || zěnme | ||
Line 74: | Line 74: | ||
<div class="liju"> | <div class="liju"> | ||
− | * 你 <em>为什么</em> | + | * 你 <em>为什么</em> 学 中文? |
− | * 你 <em> | + | * 你 <em>为了 工作</em> 学 中文。 |
</div> | </div> | ||
An example for asking and telling ''how'': | An example for asking and telling ''how'': | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="liju"> | ||
* 你 <em>怎么</em> 学习 中文? | * 你 <em>怎么</em> 学习 中文? |
Revision as of 03:38, 24 November 2011
Question words are one way to form questions in Chinese. In English, question words are also known as wh-words, as the majority of them begin with wh:
English | Chinese | Pinyin |
---|---|---|
who | 谁 | shéi |
what | 什么 | shénme |
where | 哪里 | nǎli |
when | 什么时候 | shénme shíhou |
why | 为什么 | wèishénme |
how | 怎么 | zěnme |
In English, question words have to be placed at the beginning of the sentence. This involves changing the word order to allow this rearrangement. In Chinese, using question words is a lot simpler. You simply place a question word in the place of the thing you want to ask about. Nothing needs to be rearranged.
So if the statement is
- 你 是 小李。
the question form - "who are you?" - has the same word order:
- 你 是 谁?
This works for whatever it is you want to ask about. The question form has the same word order as the statement form.
An example for asking and telling what:
- 这 是 什么?
- 这 是 书。
An example for asking and telling where:
- 你 在 哪里?
- 你 在 北京。
An example for asking and telling when:
- 你 什么时候 来了?
- 你 昨天 来了。
An example for asking and telling why:
- 你 为什么 学 中文?
- 你 为了 工作 学 中文。
An example for asking and telling how:
- 你 怎么 学习 中文?
- 你 用 课本 学习 中文。