A2

Serial Verb Constructions

Động Từ Nối Tiếp

Serial Verb Constructions in Vietnamese

Overview

Serial verb constructions (SVCs) are sequences of two or more verbs used together without conjunctions or markers between them. In Vietnamese, "đi ăn" (go eat), "đến ngồi" (come sit), and "chạy ra" (run out) are all serial verb constructions where verbs chain directly. This is one of the most distinctive and frequent patterns in Vietnamese.

At the CEFR A2 level, recognizing and producing SVCs is essential because they are the natural way Vietnamese expresses many ideas that English handles with prepositions, infinitives, or separate clauses. "Go to eat" becomes simply "đi ăn" -- two verbs side by side.

SVCs are so pervasive in Vietnamese that avoiding them would make your speech sound unnaturally stilted. Movement + action, action + direction, and cause + result are the most common SVC patterns.

How It Works

Pattern Example Meaning
Movement + Action đi ăn go eat
Movement + Action đến ngồi come sit
Action + Direction chạy ra run out
Action + Direction đi vào go in
Action + Purpose đi mua go buy
Action + Result nghe hiểu listen-understand

Common first verbs in SVCs:

Verb Role Examples
đi go + action đi ăn, đi mua, đi chơi
đến come + action đến xem, đến giúp
về return + action về ăn, về ngủ
ra go out + action ra xem, ra đón
vào go in + action vào ngồi, vào ăn

Common directional second verbs:

Verb Direction Examples
ra outward đi ra (go out), chạy ra (run out)
vào inward đi vào (go in), chạy vào (run in)
lên upward đi lên (go up), leo lên (climb up)
xuống downward đi xuống (go down), bước xuống (step down)
đi away mang đi (take away), đem đi (bring away)
lại toward/back đi lại (walk over), quay lại (turn back)

Examples in Context

Vietnamese English Note
đi ăn cơm go eat (rice/food) motion + action
đến ngồi nói chuyện come sit and chat motion + posture + action
đi ra ngoài go outside motion + direction
chạy vào run in action + direction
mang đi take away action + direction
về nhà ăn go home to eat return + location + action
lên lầu ngủ go upstairs to sleep direction + action
đi chơi go have fun very common phrase
ngồi xuống ăn sit down and eat posture + action
đem lại cho tôi bring it to me triple SVC
ra đón khách go out to greet guests direction + purpose
đi tìm go look for motion + action

Common Mistakes

Inserting Conjunctions Between Verbs

  • Wrong: Tôi đi và ăn. (I go and eat)
  • Right: Tôi đi ăn. (I go eat)
  • Why: SVCs link verbs directly; adding "và" (and) makes them two separate actions rather than one integrated event.

Wrong Order in Direction SVCs

  • Wrong: Tôi ra chạy. (out run)
  • Right: Tôi chạy ra. (run out)
  • Why: In direction SVCs, the main action comes first, then the directional verb.

Trying to Use "To" Between Verbs

  • Wrong: Đi để ăn. (go to eat -- using để for purpose)
  • Right: Đi ăn. (go eat)
  • Why: Simple SVCs do not need "để" (in order to). "Để" is reserved for explicit purpose clauses in more complex sentences.

Usage Notes

"Đi chơi" (go play/go have fun) is one of the most common SVCs in daily Vietnamese. It does not necessarily mean playing a game -- it means going out for leisure or entertainment. "Đi ăn" (go eat) is another extremely frequent SVC used as an invitation.

SVCs can chain three or more verbs: "đi ra ngoài chơi" (go out outside play = go outside to have fun). The construction remains natural as long as each verb adds meaning to the sequence.

Practice Tips

  • Start with "đi + verb" combinations since "đi" is the most productive first verb: đi ăn, đi mua, đi chơi, đi làm, đi học. This single pattern covers many daily activities.
  • Practice directional pairs with movement verbs: chạy ra/vào (run out/in), đi lên/xuống (go up/down), bước ra/vào (step out/in). These physical direction patterns are very intuitive.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Basic Verb StructureA1

Concepts that build on this

More A2 concepts

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