Chinese Grammar for Beginners: The 10 Patterns That Actually Matter (HSK 1–3)
Stop memorizing rules. These 10 foundational Chinese grammar patterns — with real sentences and vocabulary — are the framework every beginner needs.
If you've ever stared at a Chinese grammar book and felt your eyes glaze over, you're not alone. Most textbooks front-load terminology: "demonstrative pronouns," "aspect particles," "modal adverbs." It sounds academic. It feels overwhelming. And worst of all — it doesn't help you talk to anyone.
Here's the truth: Chinese grammar is simpler than you think. Not easy — but simpler in structure. Once you understand the handful of patterns that actually show up in everyday conversation, everything starts to click.
This guide covers the 10 grammar patterns that form the foundation of HSK 1–3. Master these and you'll understand the structure behind thousands of real Chinese sentences.
1. Basic Sentence Order: Subject-Verb-Object (SVO)
Chinese follows the same word order as English. This is the best news in Chinese grammar.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I eat rice | 我吃米饭 | Wǒ chī mǐfàn |
| She drinks tea | 她喝茶 | Tā hē chá |
| We study Chinese | 我们学习中文 | Wǒmen xuéxí Zhōngwén |
The subject comes first, then the verb, then the object. No conjugation. No subject-verb agreement. No articles.
Quick grammar note: In Chinese, 你好 (nǐ hǎo) literally breaks down as "you good" — but it's the standard greeting, not a statement about someone's wellbeing. Context determines function.
2. The "To Be" Verb: 是 (shì)
In English, we conjugate "to be": I am, you are, he is. In Chinese, 是 (shì) doesn't conjugate. It stays the same regardless of subject.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I am a teacher | 我是老师 | Wǒ shì lǎoshī |
| She is a student | 她是学生 | Tā shì xuésheng |
| They are friends | 他们是朋友 | Tāmen shì péngyou |
Usage tip: 是 (shì) links a subject to a noun (identity, occupation, nationality). It does not link to adjectives — for that, see pattern 4.
3. Negation with 不 (bù) and 没 (méi)
There are two main negation words in Chinese, and they work differently:
不 (bù) — "not" for ongoing or future actions, preferences, and general statements:
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I don't eat meat | 我不吃肉 | Wǒ bù chī ròu |
| She doesn't like coffee | 她不喜欢咖啡 | Tā bù xǐhuan kāfēi |
| It's not expensive | 不贵 | Bù guì |
没 (méi) — "not" for completed actions or existence (the opposite of 有 yǒu):
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I didn't go | 我没去 | Wǒ méi qù |
| She hasn't eaten | 她没吃 | Tā méi chī |
| There's no water | 没水 | Méi shuǐ |
Key rule: 不 (bù) is your default negation. 没 (méi) specifically negates past/completed actions or the existence marker 有 (yǒu). Put 不 or 没 directly before the word you're negating — no helping verbs, no auxiliary words.
4. Adjective + 很 (hěn) Pattern
Chinese doesn't use "to be" with adjectives. Instead, adjectives connect directly to subjects using 很 (hěn) — historically "very," but functionally just a linking word in basic sentences.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I am tired | 我很累 | Wǒ hěn lèi |
| The food is delicious | 好吃 | Hǎo chī (colloquially, no 很 needed) |
| She is beautiful | 她很漂亮 | Tā hěn piàoliang |
| This book is interesting | 这本书很有意思 | Zhè běn shū hěn yǒu yìsi |
Common beginner mistake: Saying 我是累 (Wǒ shì lèi). That sounds like "I am a tired" — because 是 (shì) links to nouns, not adjectives. Use 很 (hěn) to connect adjectives to subjects.
5. The Question Particle: 吗 (ma)
The simplest way to make a yes/no question in Chinese: add 吗 to the end of a statement.
| Statement | Question | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| You are a student | You are a student? | Nǐ shì xuésheng. Nǐ shì xuésheng ma? |
| She drinks tea | She drinks tea? | Tā hē chá. Tā hē chá ma? |
| It's expensive | It's expensive? | Guì. Guì ma? |
No auxiliary verbs. No word order changes. Just add 吗.
6. Where, What, Who: 哪里 (nǎlǐ), 什么 (shénme), 谁 (shéi)
Chinese question words don't move around the sentence — they stay where the answer would be.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| Where are you going? | 你去哪里? | Nǐ qù nǎlǐ? |
| What are you eating? | 你吃什么? | Nǐ chī shénme? |
| Who is that? | 那是谁? | Nà shì shéi? |
| Why? | 为什么? | Wèi shénme? |
| How much? | 多少钱? | Duō shǎo qián? |
Notice: the question word replaces the answer, in the same position. "Where are you going?" → "You go where?" → 你去哪里? → Nǐ qù nǎlǐ?
7. The Possession Particle: 的 (de)
的 (de) marks possession or description. It connects two nouns, or an adjective to a noun.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| my book | 我的书 | Wǒ de shū |
| her name | 她的名字 | Tā de míngzi |
| Chinese teacher | 中文老师 | Zhōngwén lǎoshī |
| very interesting | 很有意思 | Hěn yǒu yìsi |
Dropping 的: In casual speech, Chinese often drops 的 when it's obvious from context. 我的书 (wǒ de shū, "my book") can become just 我书 (wǒ shū). This is normal and common in conversation.
8. There Is/Are: 有 (yǒu)
有 (yǒu) means "to have" and "there is/are." Unlike English's separate "there is" construction, Chinese uses the same word for both.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I have a friend | 我有一个朋友 | Wǒ yǒu yī ge péngyou |
| There is a restaurant nearby | 附近有一个饭馆 | Fùjìn yǒu yī ge fànguǎn |
| There is no water | 没水 | Méi shuǐ |
| Do you have time? | 你有时间吗? | Nǐ yǒu shíjiān ma? |
9. Numbers and Measure Words (量词 liàngcí)
Chinese always pairs numbers with a measure word between the number and the noun. English does this too (three cups of coffee), but Chinese requires it with every noun.
| Noun | Measure Word | Example |
|---|---|---|
| book (书) | 本 (běn) | 三本书 (sān běn shū) — three books |
| person (人) | 个 (gè) | 五个人 (wǔ gè rén) — five people |
| cup (杯) | 杯 (bēi) | 两杯茶 (liǎng bēi chá) — two cups of tea |
| time/instance (次) | 次 (cì) | 去一次 (qù yī cì) — go once |
| year (年) | 年 (nián) | 一年 (yī nián) — one year |
个 (gè) is the universal fallback measure word. If you don't know the specific measure word, 个 is almost always acceptable in conversation.
10. Completed Action: 了 (le)
了 (le) is the most notorious Chinese grammar point — because it has multiple functions. For HSK 1–3 beginners, focus on 了 as a completed action marker at the end of a sentence:
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| I ate | 我吃了 | Wǒ chī le |
| She left | 她走了 | Tā zǒu le |
| I bought a book | 我买了一本书 | Wǒ mǎi le yī běn shū |
Common beginner trap: 了 (le) doesn't mean "past tense" the way English "-ed" does. It marks completed actions or changes of state. Adding 了 to every verb you want to put in the past is a common overcorrection. 了 also appears in non-past contexts (for example, 你吃了饭吗? — "Have you eaten?") where it marks a completed meal rather than a past event.
Putting It Together: A Sample Dialogue
Now let's see these patterns in real conversation:
A: 你好!你好吗? Nǐ hǎo! Nǐ hǎo ma? "Hello! How are you?"
B: 我很好,谢谢。你呢? Wǒ hěn hǎo, xièxie. Nǐ ne? "I'm fine, thanks. And you?"
A: 我也不错。你是学生吗? Wǒ yě búcuò. Nǐ shì xuésheng ma? "I'm also good. Are you a student?"
B: 是的,我是学生。你呢? Shì de, wǒ shì xuésheng. Nǐ ne? "Yes, I'm a student. How about you?"
A: 我是老师。我今天很累。 Wǒ shì lǎoshī. Wǒ jīntiān hěn lèi. "I'm a teacher. I'm very tired today."
B: 你教什么? Nǐ jiāo shénme? "What do you teach?"
A: 我教中文。 Wǒ jiāo Zhōngwén. "I teach Chinese."
Essential Grammar Vocabulary (HSK 1–3)
| Chinese | Pinyin | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 是 | shì | to be |
| 不 | bù | not |
| 没 | méi | not (completed) |
| 有 | yǒu | to have; there is |
| 的 | de | possessive particle |
| 很 | hěn | very (linking particle) |
| 了 | le | completed action particle |
| 吗 | ma | question particle |
| 呢 | ne | question particle (follow-up) |
| 什么 | shénme | what |
| 谁 | shéi | who |
| 哪里 | nǎlǐ | where |
| 为什么 | wèi shénme | why |
| 多少 | duō shǎo | how many/much |
| 这个 | zhège | this one |
| 那个 | nàge | that one |
| 一 | yī | one |
| 二 | èr | two |
| 三 | sān | three |
| 个 | gè | (measure word) |
The Bottom Line
Chinese grammar has fewer rules than English. There are no verb conjugations, no plural forms, no subject-verb agreement. What it does have is a small set of structural patterns — the 10 above — that layer together to form complex sentences.
The mistake most beginners make: trying to memorize grammar rules before encountering them in real sentences. The better approach: learn the pattern, then see it in action.
Pinyora's reading mode lets you tap any word in a real Chinese story to see its pinyin, tone color, and saved example sentence. When you encounter 了 (le) in a story and tap it, you see the pattern in context — not just the rule in a textbook.
If you're ready to see grammar patterns in real Chinese text, try Pinyora free. Read authentic stories with tone-coded pinyin and build your vocabulary from sentences that actually exist.
The 10 patterns above will carry you through HSK 3 and most everyday conversation. Once you're comfortable with these, the next layer — 了 (le) in other contexts, 把 (bǎ) construction, potential complements — becomes much easier to absorb. One layer at a time. That's how this works.