Z Chinese Grammar Basic
Browse 12 Chinese Grammar Basic entries for Chinese under Z.
Pinyin Z
- 在 + Verb (progressive) zài The particle 在 (zài) is placed before a verb to indicate that an action is currently in progress. It functions similarly to the English p...
- 真 + Adj. (really) zhēn The adverb 真 (zhēn) means 'really' or 'truly' and is placed before an adjective or verb to emphasize that something genuinely possesses t...
- 怎么 + Verb (how to) zěnme The word 怎么 (zěnme) placed before a verb asks how to do something. It is the standard way to inquire about methods, procedures, or direct...
- 怎么样 (how is it) zěnmeyàng The phrase 怎么样 (zěnmeyàng) is used to ask about the quality, condition, or status of something. It functions like 'how is it?' or 'what d...
- 怎么 (asking why) zěnme The word 怎么 (zěnme) placed before a verb can express surprise or ask 'why' or 'how come' when something unexpected has happened. It conve...
- 怎么样 (how about) zěnmeyàng The expression 怎么样 (zěnmeyàng) is used to ask for someone's opinion or evaluation about something. It is placed at the end of the questio...
- 再 (again in the future) zài The adverb 再 (zài) expresses doing something 'again' in the future or repeating an action that has not yet happened. It always refers to ...
- 在 + Place (existence in a place) zài The verb 在 (zài) expresses that someone or something exists or is located at a specific place. It is one of the most fundamental structur...
- 着 (aspect particle) zhe The aspect particle 着 (zhe) is placed after a verb to indicate a continuous or ongoing state. It describes a state that persists rather t...
- 在 + Place + Verb (location of action) zài When 在 (zài) appears before a verb with a location, it indicates where an action takes place. The structure is Subject + 在 + Place + Verb...
- Verb + 在 (result location) zài In certain expressions, 在 (zài) follows a verb to indicate where the result of an action ends up. This pattern uses specific verbs like 住...
- 最 (superlative) zuì Use 最 (zuì) before an adjective or verb to express the superlative degree, meaning 'the most' or '-est.' It indicates that something has ...