Difference between revisions of "Counting money"
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* 三 <em>块</em> 八 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">sān <em>kuài</em> bā <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">three kuai eight mao (3.8)</span> | * 三 <em>块</em> 八 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">sān <em>kuài</em> bā <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">three kuai eight mao (3.8)</span> | ||
− | * 十 <em>块</em> 两 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">shí <em>kuài </em> liǎng <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">ten kuai two mao (10.2)</span> | + | * 十 <em>块</em> 两 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">shí <em>kuài</em> liǎng <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">ten kuai two mao (10.2)</span> |
− | * 九 <em>块</em> 五 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">jiǔ <em>kuài</em>wǔ <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">nine kuai five mao (9.5)</span> | + | * 九 <em>块</em> 五 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">jiǔ <em>kuài</em> wǔ <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">nine kuai five mao (9.5)</span> |
* 一 <em>块</em> 七 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">yī <em>kuài</em> qī <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">one kuai seven mao (1.7)</span> | * 一 <em>块</em> 七 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">yī <em>kuài</em> qī <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">one kuai seven mao (1.7)</span> | ||
* 五 十 <em>块</em> 五 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">wǔshí <em>kuài</em> wǔ <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">fifty kuai five mao (50.5)</span> | * 五 十 <em>块</em> 五 <em>毛</em> <span class="pinyin">wǔshí <em>kuài</em> wǔ <em>máo</em></span><span class="trans">fifty kuai five mao (50.5)</span> |
Revision as of 08:05, 12 August 2015
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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 three kuai eight mao (3.8)
- 十 块 两 毛 ten kuai two mao (10.2)
- 九 块 五 毛 nine kuai five mao (9.5)
- 一 块 七 毛 one kuai seven mao (1.7)
- 五 十 块 五 毛 fifty kuai five mao (50.5)
- 七 十 二 块 四 毛 seventy-two kuai four mao (72.4)
- 一 百 块 五 毛 one hundred kuai five mao (100.5)
- 五 百 块 三 毛 five hundred kuai three mao (500.3)
- 两 千 两 百 块 两 毛 two thousand two hundred kuai two mao (2200.2)
- 三 千 一 百 块 一 毛 three thousand one hundred kuai one mao (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 (sān kuài bā)". Also this way of speaking is normally only used in matters with less than 100.
- 三 块 八Three kuai eight (3.8)
- 十 块 二Ten kuai two mao (10.2)
- 九 块 五Nine kuai five mao (9.5)
- 一 块 七One kuai seven mao (1.7)
- 五 十 块 五Fifty kuai five mao (50.5)
- 七 十 二 块 四Seventy-two kuai four mao (72.4)
- 二 十 三 块 八Twenty-three kuai eight mao (23.8)
- 两 百 一 十 二 块 三Two hundred and twelve kuai three mao (212.3)
- 一 百 七 十 二 块 四One hundred and seventy-two kuai four mao (172.4)
- 一 千 三 百 五 十 八 块 五One thousand three hundred and fifty-eight kuai five mao (1358.5)
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three kuai eight mao six fen (3.86)
And if there's no smaller unit, e.g. 3 RMB, you can just say:
- 三 块Three kuai
块 (kuài) is the more common, informal way to talk about money. More formally you can use 元 (yuán) 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 (kuài) 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