Difference between revisions of "Expressing "half" with "ban""

m (Text replacement - "xīngqí" to "xīngqī")
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* 七 <strong>瓶</strong> <em>半</em> 酒 <span class="pinyin">qī <strong>píng</strong> <em>bàn</em> jiǔ</span><span class="trans">seven and a half bottles of liquor</span>
 
* 七 <strong>瓶</strong> <em>半</em> 酒 <span class="pinyin">qī <strong>píng</strong> <em>bàn</em> jiǔ</span><span class="trans">seven and a half bottles of liquor</span>
 
* 八 <strong>只</strong> <em>半</em> 鸡 <span class="pinyin">bā <strong>zhǐ</strong> <em>bàn</em> jī</span><span class="trans">eight and a half chickens</span>
 
* 八 <strong>只</strong> <em>半</em> 鸡 <span class="pinyin">bā <strong>zhǐ</strong> <em>bàn</em> jī</span><span class="trans">eight and a half chickens</span>
* 九 <strong>个</strong> <em>半</em> 星期 <span class="pinyin">jiǔ <strong>gè</strong> <em>bàn</em> xīngqí</span><span class="trans">nine and a half pieces of meat</span>
+
* 九 <strong>个</strong> <em>半</em> 星期 <span class="pinyin">jiǔ <strong>gè</strong> <em>bàn</em> xīngqī</span><span class="trans">nine and a half pieces of meat</span>
 
* 十 <strong>包</strong> <em>半</em> 饼干 <span class="pinyin">shí <strong>bāo</strong> <em>bàn</em> bǐnggān</span><span class="trans">ten and a half bags of crackers</span>
 
* 十 <strong>包</strong> <em>半</em> 饼干 <span class="pinyin">shí <strong>bāo</strong> <em>bàn</em> bǐnggān</span><span class="trans">ten and a half bags of crackers</span>
  

Revision as of 17:40, 2 January 2015

Chinese-grammar-wiki-ban.jpg

半 (bàn) means "half." That's simple enough, but what can get slightly tricky is the rules for how it combines with measure words. We explain all those here.

Standard Usage

Used alone

Structure

半 + Measure Word + Noun

Examples

The measure words are also indicated below.

  • 小时 bàn xiǎoshíhalf an hour
  • bàn yuèhalf a month
  • 苹果 bàn píngguǒhalf an apple
  • 米饭 bàn wǎn mǐfànhalf a bowl of rice
  • bàn tiáohalf a fish
  • bàn zhǐhalf a chicken
  • 红酒 bàn bēi hóngjiǔhalf a glass of red wine
  • bàn píng jiǔhalf a bottle of liquor
  • 炒面 bàn fèn chǎomiàn
  • 巧克力 bàn kuài qiǎokèlì

With a Number

When it's more than just a half, then 半 (bàn) comes after the measure word instead of before. It's the difference between "half an hour" and "an hour and a half." The order is actually basically the same as what we do in English (we just don't have so many pesky measure words to keep track of in English!).

Structure

Number + Measure Word + 半 + Noun

Examples

  • 小时 bàn xiǎoshían hour and a half
  • liǎng bàn yuètwo and a half months
  • 苹果 sān bàn píngguǒthree and a half apples
  • 红酒 bēi bàn hóngjiǔfour and a half glasses of red wine
  • 米饭 wǎn bàn mǐfànfive and a half bowls of rice
  • liù tiáo bànsix and a half fish
  • píng bàn jiǔseven and a half bottles of liquor
  • zhǐ bàneight and a half chickens
  • 星期 jiǔ bàn xīngqīnine and a half pieces of meat
  • 饼干 shí bāo bàn bǐnggānten and a half bags of crackers

Notable Exceptions

There are some words that act as their own measure words, notably the time words 天 (tiān), meaning "day," and 年 (nián), meaning "year."

Used alone

Structure

半 + 天/年

Examples

  • bàn tiān half a day
  • bàn niánhalf a year

Note that you do not need to use 个 (ge) here; in fact, it's wrong to do so:

  • bàn tiānhalf a day
  • bàn nián half a year

With a Number

Structure

Number + 天/年 + 半

Examples

  • liǎng tiān bàntwo and a half days
  • nián bàna year and a half
  • sān tiān bànthree and a half days
  • nián bànfour and a half years

See also

Sources and further reading

Books