A1

Common Verbs

常用动词

Common Verbs in Chinese

Overview

Chinese verbs are beautifully simple in form: they never conjugate. Unlike European languages where verbs change based on subject, tense, and mood, Chinese verbs stay the same regardless of who performs the action or when it happens. The verb 去 (qù, go) remains 去 whether you say "I go," "he went," or "they will go."

At the CEFR A1 level, learning high-frequency verbs gives you immediate communicative power. Verbs like 是 (be), 有 (have), 去 (go), 来 (come), 吃 (eat), 看 (see/read), and 要 (want) appear in countless everyday sentences. Since verbs do not change form, the challenge shifts to learning proper word order and aspect markers.

Chinese verbs can combine in sequence (serial verbs), take aspect particles (了, 着, 过) to indicate completion or experience, and pair with complements to show results. These are topics for later levels, but the base verbs you learn now will serve as the foundation.

How It Works

High-frequency verbs

Verb Pinyin Meaning Example
shì be (identity) 我是学生 (I am a student)
yǒu have/exist 我有一本书 (I have a book)
go 我去学校 (I go to school)
lái come 他来了 (He came)
chī eat 吃早饭 (eat breakfast)
drink 喝水 (drink water)
kàn see/look/read 看书 (read a book)
tīng listen/hear 听音乐 (listen to music)
shuō say/speak 说中文 (speak Chinese)
zuò do/make 做作业 (do homework)
mǎi buy 买东西 (buy things)
mài sell 卖水果 (sell fruit)
yào want/need/will 我要水 (I want water)
gěi give 给我 (give me)
xué study/learn 学中文 (study Chinese)

Key feature: no conjugation

English Chinese Note
I go 我去 same verb
He goes 他去 same verb
I went 我去了 了 added, verb unchanged
I will go 我要去 要 added, verb unchanged

Examples in Context

Chinese Pinyin English Note
我要去商店。 Wǒ yào qù shāngdiàn. I want to go to the store. 要 + 去
你看什么? Nǐ kàn shénme? What are you looking at? question
他会说英语。 Tā huì shuō Yīngyǔ. He can speak English. with modal 会
我们吃中国菜。 Wǒmen chī Zhōngguó cài. We eat Chinese food. basic SVO
请来这里。 Qǐng lái zhèlǐ. Please come here. polite request
我每天做饭。 Wǒ měi tiān zuò fàn. I cook every day. habit
你买什么了? Nǐ mǎi shénme le? What did you buy? with 了
听我说。 Tīng wǒ shuō. Listen to me. imperative
给你。 Gěi nǐ. Here you go. / For you. giving
她喜欢学中文。 Tā xǐhuān xué Zhōngwén. She likes studying Chinese. verb + verb

Common Mistakes

Trying to conjugate verbs

  • Wrong: Looking for past/present/future forms of 去
  • Right: 去 is always 去; use time words or particles for context
  • Why: Chinese verbs are invariable. Tense is expressed through context, time words, and aspect particles.

Confusing 看 (see/look/read) contexts

  • Wrong: Using 看 only for "see"
  • Right: 看书 (read a book), 看电影 (watch a movie), 看医生 (see a doctor)
  • Why: 看 covers a broader semantic range than any single English verb; the object determines the specific meaning.

Mixing up 买 (mǎi, buy) and 卖 (mài, sell)

  • Wrong: Confusing 买 and 卖 due to similar pronunciation
  • Right: 买 (3rd tone) = buy; 卖 (4th tone) = sell
  • Why: These are a minimal tone pair. The tone is the only difference, so it must be precise.

Practice Tips

  • Create short sentences with each new verb using the SVO pattern: pick a subject, add the verb, add an object. Repeat with different subjects and objects.
  • Learn verbs in context rather than in isolation. Instead of just memorizing 吃 = eat, learn 吃饭, 吃早饭, 吃中国菜 as chunks.
  • Practice verb pairs with opposite meanings together: 买/卖 (buy/sell), 来/去 (come/go), 问/答 (ask/answer).

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Basic Sentence StructureA1

Concepts that build on this

More A1 concepts

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