Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
lisajoy723
What;s the difference between"I am a Chinese"and"I am Chinese"?
7 mars 2011 03:26
Réponses · 5
8
"I am Chinese" is a grammatically correct sentence simply using the adjective "Chinese" to describe yourself.
"I am a Chinese" is grammatically incorrect. You could say, "I am a Chinese person" or "I am a Chinese citizen." The reason why you need a noun such as person or citizen in this case is because you used the article "a" before "Chinese." This implies that there will be a noun used in the sentence and there is not. You must insert a noun (such as person, woman, citizen, etc) or eliminate "a" from your sentence.
Hops this helps!
7 mars 2011
2
It is the difference between Chinese as a citizen of the People's Republic of China and being Chinese as an ethnic member. (Think of those genetically Chinese who live in Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines, Canada and the US.)
7 mars 2011
Chinese is both a noun and adjective
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/chinese
Define: Chi·nese: [chahy-neez, -nees]
–Noun
. . . . .
4.
a native or descendant of a native of China.
–Adjective
5.
of or pertaining to China, its inhabitants, or one of their languages.
7 mars 2011
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lisajoy723
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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