ä½ å¥½ä¸å¥½ ? (nee how boo how?) ( How are you? [Literally: Are you good or not good? ])
WÇ hÇo. æ好 . (waw how.)( Iâm okay. ) or WÇ bùhÇo. æä¸å¥½ . (waw boo-how.) ( Iâm not okay. )
Some Chinese verbs, such as xÇhuÄn å欢 ( åæ¡ ) (she-hwan) ( to like/to want ), have two syllables. When Chinese people speak quickly, they may leave out the second syllable in a few bisyllabic verbs and even a few auxiliary verbs the first time they come up in the verb- bù -verb pattern. So instead of saying TÄ xÇhuÄn bùxÇhuÄn hÄ jiÇ? 她å欢ä¸å欢åé
? ( 她åæ¡ä¸åæ¡åé
?) (tah she-hwan boo-she-hwan huh jyo?) to mean Does he or she like to drink wine?, someone may say TÄ xÇ bùxÇhuÄn hÄ jiÇ? 她åä¸å欢åé
? ( 她åä¸åæ¡åé
?) (tah she boo-she-hwan huh jyoe?).
Interrogative pronouns
A third way to ask questions in Chinese is to use interrogative pronouns. The following are pronouns that act as questions in Chinese:
nÇ åª (nah) + classifier ( which )
nÇr åªå¿ ( åª å
) (nar) ( where )
shéi è° ( 誰 ) (shay) ( who/whom )
shéi de è° ç ( 誰 ç ) (shay duh) ( whose )
shénme ä»ä¹ ( ç麼 ) (shummuh) ( what )
shénme dìfÄng ä»ä¹å°æ¹ ( ç麼å°æ¹ ) (shummah dee-fahng) ( where )
Donât confuse nÇ with nÇr. That one extra letter makes the difference between saying which (nÇ) and where (nÇr).
Figuring out where such interrogative pronouns should go in any given sentence is easy. Just put them wherever the answer would be found. For example
Question: NÇ shì shéi? ä½ æ¯è° ? ( ä½ æ¯èª° ?) (nee shir shay?) ( Who are you? )
Answer: NÇ shì wÇ péngyÇu. ä½ æ¯ææå . (nee shir waw puhng-yo.) ( Youâre my friend. )
Question: TÄde nÇpéngyÇu zà i nÇr? ä»ç女æåå¨åªå¿ ? ( ä»ç女æåå¨åªå
?) (tah duh nyew-puhng-yo dzye nar?) ( Where is his girlfriend? )
Answer: TÄde nÇpéngyÇu zà i jiÄlÇ. ä»ç女æåå¨å®¶é . ( ä»ç女æåå¨å®¶è£¡ .) (tah-duh nyew-puhng-yo dzye jyah-lee.) ( His girlfriend is at home. )
A way to ask who or which person without sounding rude or too familiar is to use the term nÄi wèi åªä½ (nye way) (Literally: which person ). For example, NÇ yéye shì nÄi wèi? ä½ ç·ç·æ¯åªä½ ? ( ä½ çºçº æ¯åªä½ ?) (nee yeh-yeh shir nay way?) ( Which one is your grandfather? )
You often find interrogative pronouns at the beginning of sentences if theyâre followed by the verb yÇu æ (yo) ( to exist ), such as Shéi yÇu wÇde bÇ? è°ææçç¬ ? ( 誰ææçç ?) (shay yo waw-duh bee?) ( Who has my pen? )
 Fun & Games
Match the Chinese questions with the English translations. (See Appendix D for the correct answer.)
1. Shì bú shì? æ¯ä¸æ¯ ?
a. Who are you?
2. NÇ shuÅ ZhÅngwén ma? ä½ è¯´ä¸æå ? ( ä½ èªªä¸æå ?)
b. Isnât that so?
3. NÇ shì shéi? ä½ æ¯è° ? ( ä½ æ¯èª° ?)
c. Do you have a laptop?
4. Nà yÇu shénme guÄnxi? é£æä»ä¹å
³ç³» ? ( é£æç麼éä¿ ?)
d. Who cares?
5. NÇ yÇu méiyÇu yÃge shÇutÃshì? ä½ æ没æä¸ä¸ªææå¼ ? ( ä½ ææ²æä¸åææå¼ ?)
e. Do you speak Chinese?
Chapter 4
Getting Started with Basic Expressions: NÇ HÇo!
In This Chapter
Introducing yourself and
Suzanne Enoch
Mary Saums
Brian Keene, Steven L. Shrewsbury
Belle Payton
Amanda Usen
Deborah Bladon
Greg Herren
Kenadee Bryant
Lynette Ferreira
Mat Johnson