Tag questions with 是不是 and 是否They are used when a speaker wants to confirm what she or he already believes.
Making complex sentences out of three or more simple sentencesComplex sentences are the sentences with three or more grammatical basics.
Basic sentence structureChinese sentences have very strict word order. The meaning of what is said may depend on it. In other words, changing the order of words can change the meaning of a sentence.
The non-subject-predicate constructionThe non-subject-predicate construction (非主谓句) is a sentence whose initial constituent is not the subject but rather the predicate, or a sentence whose constituent is neither a clear-cut subject nor a predicate.
Sentences with two verbsWe'll talk about sentences where we use the verbs of motion 来 or 去 and another verb. The second verb indicates the purpose of the movement or the mode of movement.
Double-object sentence (双兵语句) A double-object sentence is a sentence where a verb is followed by two objects.
Prepositions in ChineseA preposition (介词) is an auxiliary part of speech that expresses a relationship between words in phrases and sentences.
Complete and incomplete sentencesChinese sentences can be either complete or incomplete. A complete sentence must have a subject and a predicate. An incomplete consists of only the subject or only the predicate.
Interrogative sentenceThere are few types of interrogative sentences (疑问句) in Chinese. Let's look at each of them.
Chinese inverted sentencesAn inversion or inverted sentence (倒装句) is a change in the basic word order of a sentence. It stylistically and emotionally colors the sentence. We should emphasize these sentences using intonation.
The order of adverbial modifiers in a sentenceAn adverbial modifier is a part of a sentence that modifies a verb-predicate and describes a feature or characteristic of an action.
Negative sentences in ChineseA negative sentence (否定句) is constructed by adding a negative particle before the predicate.
Verbless sentencesIn these sentences, the predicate is not a verb, but rather a noun, adjective, participle, or adverb. This type of predicate is called a nominal predicate.