Chinese song-where is spring
春天在哪里呀 Chūntiān zài nǎlǐ ya where is spring 春天在哪里 chūntiān zài nǎlǐ where is spring 春天在那青翠的山林里 chūntiān zài nà qīngcuì de shānlín lǐ Spring is in the green mountain and…
春天在哪里呀 Chūntiān zài nǎlǐ ya where is spring 春天在哪里 chūntiān zài nǎlǐ where is spring 春天在那青翠的山林里 chūntiān zài nà qīngcuì de shānlín lǐ Spring is in the green mountain and…
What is HSK?HSK is short for 汉语(Hànyǔ, Chinese language)水平(水平shuǐpíng, level)考试(kǎoshì,test),which is a standardized Chinese language proficiency test that assesses the ability of non-native speakers to use Chinese in their daily lives,…
ATTRIBUTIVES are words or expressions used to qualify nouns. They can be used to either describe or delimit nuns. In Chinese language, nouns, nominal phrases, verbs, verbal phrases adjectives and adjectival phrases can be…
THE COMPLEMENT OF POSIBILITY indicates the possibility or potentiality of an action. Pattern : Verb + 得(dé)/(/)不(bù) + complement of result/ directional complement The complement of result and the directional complement can…
你好,欢迎来到Marco Polo Mandarin!Nǐ hǎo, huānyíng láidào Marco Polo Mandarin!Hello,welcome to Marco Polo Mandarin! 我是中文老师Becky。Wǒ shì zhōngwén lǎoshī Becky.I am Chinese teacher Becky. 今天我们讲一讲中文的发音。Jīntiān wǒmen jiǎng yī jiǎng zhōngwén de fāyīn.Today…
In Chinese, a numeral-measure word is usually placed after a verb to indicate the quantity of an object, which is similar to English. However, in English a measure word is not…
THE MODAL COMPLEMENT is used to describe or evaluate the state of an action or behavior. Pattern one: Verb + 得(de) + adv. + adj. Example: 你今天穿得很漂亮啊。 Nǐ jīntiān chuān de…
Complement of result is usually placed after a verb or an adjective to indicate the result of an action or the change of a status. For example, “找 zhǎo” means…
Complement is a typical element in Chinese language. It usually goes after a verb or an adjective to describe the result, degree, direction, possibility, state, quantity or duration of an action. My second secret focuses…
In English, there are two question types, Yes/No (general questions) and Wh-questions (special questions). In Chinese, it’s the same. But the difference is that question sentences in Chinese are much simpler…