Difference between revisions of "State complement"

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State complements describe an achieved state of an action. State complements are usually adjective phrases (adverb + adjective) but can take the form of verbal phrases, subject-predicate phrase or other complements. State complements that are adjective phrases often look the same as degree complements and thus often lumped together with degree complements in textbooks. However, often state complements take a very distinct form of complement (such as entire verb phrases that serve as state complements) which is why they are sometimes categorized as a distinct form of complement. State complement phrases can be quite complex, at times having entire complement phrases act as the state complement. It may be useful to think of more complex complement phrases as meaning "(verb) to the point of (complement)."
 
State complements describe an achieved state of an action. State complements are usually adjective phrases (adverb + adjective) but can take the form of verbal phrases, subject-predicate phrase or other complements. State complements that are adjective phrases often look the same as degree complements and thus often lumped together with degree complements in textbooks. However, often state complements take a very distinct form of complement (such as entire verb phrases that serve as state complements) which is why they are sometimes categorized as a distinct form of complement. State complement phrases can be quite complex, at times having entire complement phrases act as the state complement. It may be useful to think of more complex complement phrases as meaning "(verb) to the point of (complement)."

Revision as of 09:13, 26 April 2014

Also known as: 状态补语 (zhuàngtài bǔyǔ), 情态补语 (qíngtài bǔyǔ) and complement of state.

State complements describe an achieved state of an action. State complements are usually adjective phrases (adverb + adjective) but can take the form of verbal phrases, subject-predicate phrase or other complements. State complements that are adjective phrases often look the same as degree complements and thus often lumped together with degree complements in textbooks. However, often state complements take a very distinct form of complement (such as entire verb phrases that serve as state complements) which is why they are sometimes categorized as a distinct form of complement. State complement phrases can be quite complex, at times having entire complement phrases act as the state complement. It may be useful to think of more complex complement phrases as meaning "(verb) to the point of (complement)."

Different Kinds of State Complements

Adjective Phrase State Complements

In a state complement phrase the verb must be followed by 得 then the complement follows. The most common type of state complement of state, where the complement is an adjective phrase, is formed by placing the adjective phrase after 得. If the verb taking a complement also has an object the should occur after the object and before 得. The sentence is negated by putting 不 in place of the adverb (not before the verb) Some examples:

Adjective Phrases as State Complements
Subject (Verb) Object Verb Adverb Adjective Particle
校园
马先生
他们 快乐
(写) 汉字

Phrases and other complements as State Complements

Verb phrases (VP), subject-predicate phrases (SP) and other complements (CP) can also serve as complements of state. As with adjective phrase state complements they can describe a state that arose from the action of the main verb in the sentence. Some examples:

Subject Verb VP/SP/CP Explanation
这件房间 放不下其他东西了 This example uses a potential complement phrase to express that state of the room: "This room is filled to the point that you are unable to fit more stuff."
他们 唱歌唱 忘了时间 Here the state complement is a verb phrase and expresses the state to which the subject got caught up in their singing activities (probably at KTV) "They sang to the point where they lost track of time."
我的姐姐 吃饭吃 满嘴流油 This state complement is also a verb phrase and expresses the resulting state of the subject's eating: "My sister ate to the point that her mouth was flowing with oil."
太太 激动 热血沸腾 The state complement in this example is an idiomatic phrase that describes the state of anger the subject has arrived at: "The wife was agitated to point of burning rage."

State Complements in Questions

You can form questions with sentences containing result complements just as you would with any other sentence:

Some examples:

  • 你 来 得 很早 吗 ?Did you come very early?
  • 你 住 得 很好 吗 ?Do you live well?
  • 谁 玩 得 最 高兴 ?Who plays so happily?
  • 什么地方 发展 得 很 好 ?What place is very developed?
  • 工作 得 好 不好?Is the work good?
  • 衣服 洗 得 干净 不 干净?Is the clothing washed clean?

References and Further Reading

Books

Websites