Difference between revisions of "Expressing "a full" with "zuzu""
m (Text replace - "{{Grammar Box}}" to "{{Grammar Box}}{{#seo:keywords={{SEO Keywords}}}} ") |
m (Text replacement - ""," to ","") |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{Grammar Box}} | + | {{Grammar Box}} |
− | |||
{{Stub}} | {{Stub}} | ||
− | Sometimes in English, we may want to emphasize how big, small, long, etc. something is | + | Sometimes in English, we may want to emphasize how big, small, long, etc. something is perceived to be. We have all heard expressions like "he was a full 300 pounds," or "he was all of seven feet tall." The "a full" and "all of" in these sentences have an equivalent expression in Chinese: 足足 (zúzú). |
==Structure== | ==Structure== |
Latest revision as of 04:10, 25 April 2017
This article is a stub. Editors can help the Chinese Grammar Wiki by expanding it. |
Sometimes in English, we may want to emphasize how big, small, long, etc. something is perceived to be. We have all heard expressions like "he was a full 300 pounds," or "he was all of seven feet tall." The "a full" and "all of" in these sentences have an equivalent expression in Chinese: 足足 (zúzú).
Structure
You can put 足足 either in front or after the verb. Remember that 足足 adds emphasis to what you are saying, so you should always use it with a number. Some more commonly used verbs are 有 and 等.
足足 + Verb
Verb + 足足
Examples
- 姚明 身高 足足 有 2.26米。
- 昨天 我的 约会 不 太 顺利,她 让 我 等 了 足足 两 个 小时。
- 怪不得 他 汉语 说 得 那么 好,他 在 中国 住 了 足足 十 年 的 时间!
Sources and further reading
Books