Difference between revisions of "Using "guo" with "le""

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== See also ==
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* [[Expressing experience with "guo"]]
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* [[Expressing completion with "le"]]
  
 
== Sources and further reading ==
 
== Sources and further reading ==

Revision as of 09:09, 27 January 2012

You might be familiar with using 过 (guo) to indicate that an action has been experienced in the past, but then also see it used together with 了 (le). What's going on here? A special explanation is in order.

The Basic Pattern

The typical pattern you'll see is:

Verb + 过 + 了

You'll notice that this pattern is often used for very everyday behaviors. It's used for actions like "eating" and "brushing one's teeth" and "taking a shower."

Some examples in Chinese:

  • 她 吃 "She ate (already)."
  • 牙 刷 "(I) brushed my teeth (already)."
  • 他 洗 "He has washed (already)."

The Pattern with an Object

For the examples above, you could have inserted an object to modify the basic pattern, getting this:

Verb + 过 + Object + 了

The object has been inserted in the sentences below:

  • 她 吃 "She has eaten (a meal) (already)."
  • 我 刷 "I have brushed my teeth (already)."
  • 他 洗 "He has had a shower (already)."

What the 过 does

You would be right to point out that 过 is mainly used to call attention to the fact that someone has had an experience. This is the basic pattern pointed out in the article on the basic usage of the aspectual particle 过. In the examples above, though, it's not any "once-in-a-lifetime" experiences being expressed, it's more just the information that these actions are done. Here, 过 and 了 work together to emphasize that an action is already done. This is why the translations on the side add the word "already" on parentheses on the end; this is the feeling the sentences give you. In fact, to emphasize the idea of already done even further, you could add the word for "already," 已经, before the verbs in the examples below, and it also works just fine:

  • 已经"She has already eaten (a meal)."
  • 已经"I have already brushed my teeth."
  • 已经"He has already had a shower ."

When to use 过 + 了

So when would you use the sentences above? You'd be emphasizing that the action has already occurred (so it doesn't need to be done again), so it would probably be something like this:

For the eating example:

  • 她 想 吃 吗 ? "Does she want to eat?"
  • 已经"She has already eaten (a meal)."

For the tooth brushing example:

  • 别 忘记 刷牙。 "Don't forget to brush your teeth."
  • 已经"I have already brushed my teeth."

For the taking a shower example:

  • 他 应该 洗澡。 "He should take a shower."
  • 已经"He has already had a shower ."

See also

Sources and further reading

Books

Websites