Chinese Pronouns

Imagine if every time you wanted to refer to an object you had to give it's full name...

"Maria's new Aston Martin DB5 is wonderful. The Aston Martin DB5 handles like a dream, and the Aston Martin DB5 can hit 60mph in just 3 seconds. Maria loves the Aston Martin DB5."

See how clumsy and long that is?

Well, that's where pronouns come in.

Resources for further reading:

With pronouns you only need to use the object's actual name once; and subject's not at all! From then on you can use pronouns like I, my, and it instead...

"My new Aston Martin DB5 is wonderful. It handles like a dream, and it can hit 60mph in just 3 seconds. I love it."

Much better.

Pronouns are words that are used in place of a noun. They can be the subject, the object, or complement. In Chinese, there are different kinds of Chinese pronouns.

Personal Pronouns

Personal pronouns substitute for the noun without repeating it. They can be divided into:

  • personal subject pronouns, which are used in place of the subject
  • personal direct pronouns, used in place of the object personal
  • indirect pronouns, used in place of the complement
  • reflexive pronouns, in connection with the reflexive verbs.

Possessive Pronouns

Possessive pronouns, that indicate the possession; they have the same form of the adjective possessive:

那个房子是我的 Nàge fángzi shì wǒde。- The house is mine.

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我的
Wǒde
My / Mine
你的
Nǐde
Yours
他的
Tāde
His
她的
Tāde
Hers
我们的
Wǒmen de
Ours
你们的
Nǐmen de
Yours
他们的
Tāmen de
Theirs
那个房子是我的。
Nàge fángzi shì wǒde。
The house is mine.

Demonstrative Pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns show the position in the space and in the time.

那个房子是我的 Nàge fángzi shì wǒde。 - That house is mine.

这个
zhège (zhègè)
This
那个
nàge (nàgè)
That
这些
zhèxiē
These
那些
nàxiē
Those

Indefinite Pronouns

Indefinite pronouns, that don't specify the identity of the person or of the object.

有人打过电话 Yǒurén dǎguò diànhuà。- Someone called.

某个
Mǒu gè
One / Some
有个
yǒu gè
There is a
有人打过电话
Yǒurén dǎguò diànhuà
Someone called

Interrogative Pronouns

Interrogative pronouns, that introduce questions:

shuí
who
什么
shénme
what
哪个
nǎgè (nǎge)
which
什么时候
shénme shíhòu
when
为什么
wèishénme
why
怎么
zěnme
how
哪儿
nǎ’er
where
多少钱
duōshǎoqián
how much
他是谁
Tā shì shuí ?
Who is he?

Personal Subject Pronouns:

In Chinese there are 10 personal subject pronouns: 5 for the singular, 5 for the plural.

Forms:

I
you (male)
you (female)
he
she
it
我们
wǒmen
we
你们
nǐmen
you [guys] (referring to more than one "you")
他们
tāmen
they (referring to males)
她们
tāmen
they (referring females)
它们
tāmen
they (referring to objects)

For example:

我是林萍。
Wǒ shì Lín Píng。
I am Lin Ping.
你是谁?
Nǐ shì shuí?
Who are you?
他是我的朋友。
Tā shì wǒde péngyou。
He is my friend.
她很漂亮。
Tā hěn piàoliàng。
She is pretty.
我们是中国人。
Wǒmen shì Zhōngguórén。
We are Chinese.
你们也来吗?
Nǐmen yě lái ma?
Are you [guys] coming too? (referring to more than one of "you")
他们喜欢旅行。
Tāmen xǐhuān lǚxíng。
They love traveling.

Direct Object Pronouns

In English, there are direct object pronouns, pronouns that directly receive the action of the verb. They answer the question what, or whom, like “me” “him” or “her”. In Chinese, direct object pronouns are the same words as subject pronouns. That is to say, “I” is “我” in Chinese, and “me” is also “我”. It is also the same case with words like “he/him” and “she/her” and “they/them”.

林萍看见他了。
Línpíng kànjiàn tā le。
Lin Ping saw him.
他看见林萍了。
Tā kànjiàn Lín Píng le。
He saw Lin Ping.

Reflexive pronoun

Reflexive pronouns are used in connection with reflexive verbs, in which the action reflects itself on the subject. When we want to express meanings like that, we put reflexive pronoun 自己 zìjǐ after the pronouns we have covered today.

我自己
wǒ zìjǐ
myself
你自己
nǐ zìjǐ
yourself
他自己
tā zìjǐ
himself
她自己
tā zìjǐ
herself
它自己
tā zìjǐ
itself (referring to an animal)
我们自己
wǒmen zìjǐ
ourselves
你们自己
nǐmen zìjǐ
yourselves
他们自己
tāmen zìjǐ
themselves (referring to males)
她们自己
tāmen zìjǐ
themselves (referring females)
它们自己
tāmen zìjǐ
themselves (referring to animals)

Formal 您 nín and Informal 你 nǐ

In Chinese, there are two pronouns to refer to “you”, depending on the situation. If it is a formal occasion, people tend to use formal pronoun 您 nín, 您们 nínmen, whereas on ordinary occasions or in daily communication, their informal equivalents 你 nǐ and 你们 nǐmen are used.

您好吗,林小姐?
Nín hǎoma, Lín Xiǎojiě?
How are you, Miss Lin?
你好,林小姐。
Nǐhǎo, Lín Xiǎojiě。
Hello, Miss Lin.

Chinese pronouns summary

  • Personal pronouns substitute without repeating the common or proper nouns. They can be divided in personal subject pronouns, personal direct pronouns, personal indirect pronouns and reflexive pronoun
  • Possessive pronouns indicate possession
  • Demonstrative pronouns show position in space and time
  • Indefinite pronouns, are used when we don't need to specify the identity of the person or object
  • Relative pronouns relate more propositions
  • Interrogative pronouns introduce questions
  • Direct and indirect pronouns have two forms, according to the position they have in the sentence
  • Reflexive pronouns are always used in connection with a reflexive verb
  • Formal and informal is not a matter of tradition in Chinese, but an important form of respect. Never say 你 nǐ, you, to your boss or an older genlteman!

That's it for this lesson.

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