Search from various 영어 teachers...
Tiulpan
How many Past Tenses are in Chinese grammar?
Thank you in advance.
2011년 5월 8일 오전 12:20
답변 · 14
1
No Chinese tense~~but some word means past!
2011년 5월 8일
1
None. In fact, there are no tenses in Chinese. And verbs never change their form.
2011년 5월 8일
1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_language#Very_isolating
Chinese is an analytic language. It's on the very isolating end of the morphological scale amongst all the world languages. There are no plurals, tenses, gender, or any type of conjugations whatsoever. Everything is formed combinatorially.
2011년 5월 8일
1
It's complicated. I'm investigating it just now. Verbs don't change their form, but they use various combinations of particles (guo and le) in various different patterns to express what in English are past tenses. In chinese, it's very important to be able to specify time, so you need to concentrate a lot on placing actions in timeframes. Once you can say all your 'ago, since, for, previously, after, still, anymore' you're already at 75%.
2011년 5월 8일
1
There are some words used to express past tense in Chinese, they follow the verb,otherwise there are no other tenses.
Those words are :
过 guo
(experienced action marker) expressing something that passed.
了 le
modal particle intensifying preceding clause,also called (completed action marker)
Notice: That is one of the usages of "le" 了 and "guo"过
2011년 5월 8일
더 보기
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Tiulpan
언어 구사 능력
중국어(북경어), 영어, 독일어, 일본어, 러시아어, 스페인어
학습 언어
중국어(북경어), 독일어, 일본어
좋아할 수도 있는 읽을거리

English Vocabulary for Using Microsoft Office at Work
8 좋아요 · 2 댓글

How to Answer “How Was Your Weekend?” Naturally in English
50 좋아요 · 29 댓글

Why Some Jokes Don’t Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 좋아요 · 6 댓글
다른 읽을거리
