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BeginnerClassifiers
How classifiers (measure words) work in Chinese, compared to articles and gender in Spanish and English.
Compare languages
Every Chinese noun requires a classifier when counted or modified by a demonstrative. Spanish uses gender instead. English uses nothing — bare nouns are perfectly normal.
Overview
Classifiers are words that categorize nouns, usually required when counting or pointing. Chinese has dozens of them. Spanish and English do not use classifiers at all — they rely on articles, gender, or bare nouns.
- Spanish: No classifiers. Instead, every noun has a grammatical gender (masculine/feminine) that determines article and adjective agreement.
- English: No classifiers. Uses articles (a, the) or bare nouns. Occasional measure words exist (a sheet of paper, a bottle of water) but are rare.
- Chinese: Extensive classifier system. Every noun belongs to a semantic category that determines which classifier to use.
Spanish
Spanish does not have classifiers. Instead, it has grammatical gender.
Gender agreement
Every noun is masculine or feminine. Articles and adjectives must agree:
- el libro (masc) → un libro, este libro, el libro rojo
- la mesa (fem) → una mesa, esta mesa, la mesa roja
- los libros (masc pl) → unos libros, estos libros
- las mesas (fem pl) → unas mesas, estas mesas
Counting
Spanish counts nouns directly — no classifier needed:
- un libro, dos libros, tres libros
- una mesa, dos mesas, tres mesas
The number agrees in gender with the noun:
- un libro (masc) vs una mesa (fem)
- veintiún años (masc, contracted) vs veintiuna personas (fem)
No semantic categories
Unlike Chinese classifiers, Spanish gender is not semantic. The gender of a noun is largely arbitrary:
- el vestido (the dress) — masculine, despite referring to clothing
- la mano (the hand) — feminine, despite referring to a body part
English
English has no classifiers and no grammatical gender.
Counting
English counts nouns directly, using articles or bare forms:
- a book, two books, three books
- a table, two tables, three tables
Bare nouns
English allows bare nouns (no article, no classifier) in many contexts:
- I like books. (generic plural)
- She reads every day. (habitual, no article needed)
- Water is essential. (uncountable, no article)
Measure words (limited)
English has a few measure phrases, but they are not required:
| Measure | Example |
|---|---|
| a sheet of | a sheet of paper |
| a piece of | a piece of cake |
| a bottle of | a bottle of water |
| a cup of | a cup of tea |
| a pair of | a pair of shoes |
These are optional. You can say paper, cake, water, tea, shoes without any measure word.
Chinese
Chinese has an extensive classifier system. Every noun requires a classifier when counted or modified by a demonstrative.
The basic pattern
Numeral + Classifier + Noun:
- 一本书 (one [CL] book)
- 三张纸 (three [CL] sheets of paper)
- 两只猫 (two [CL] cats)
Demonstrative + Classifier + Noun:
- 这本书 (this [CL] book)
- 那张桌子 (that [CL] table)
Common classifiers
| Classifier | Usage | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 个 | General (default) | 一个人 |
| 本 | Books, documents | 两本书 |
| 张 | Flat things | 三张纸 |
| 只 | Small animals, one of a pair | 一只鸟 |
| 头 | Large animals | 一头牛 |
| 条 | Long, thin things | 两条鱼 |
| 位 | People (polite) | 这位老师 |
| 口 | Family members | 五口人 |
| 件 | Clothes, matters | 一件衣服 |
| 把 | Objects with handles | 一把刀 |
| 辆 | Vehicles | 两辆车 |
Semantic categories
Chinese classifiers are semantic — they reflect the nature of the object:
- Shape: 张 (flat), 条 (long), 块 (chunky)
- Size: 只 (small), 头 (large)
- Function: 把 (handled tools), 辆 (vehicles)
- Respect: 位 (polite for people), 个 (neutral)
个 as default
When unsure, 个 is the safe fallback:
- 一个问题 (a question)
- 这个想法 (this idea)
Using 个 for everything is grammatically correct but sounds childish. Native speakers prefer specific classifiers.
Comparison at a glance
| Feature | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| System | Grammatical gender | No system | Semantic classifiers |
| Required for counting | No | No | Yes |
| Required for demonstratives | No | No | Yes |
| Categories | Masculine / Feminine | None | Shape, size, function, respect |
| Number agreement | Yes (gender + number) | Yes (plural -s) | No (classifier doesn’t change) |
| Measure words | None | Optional (a sheet of) | Mandatory |
| Semantic logic | Mostly arbitrary | N/A | Highly semantic |
Examples in context
Counting books
- ES: tres libros
- EN: three books
- ZH: 三本书
This table
- ES: esta mesa
- EN: this table
- ZH: 这张桌子
Two cats
- ES: dos gatos
- EN: two cats
- ZH: 两只猫
Common mistakes
-
English/Spanish speakers learning Chinese: Omitting classifiers: 三书 → 三本书
-
English/Spanish speakers learning Chinese: Using 个 for everything: 一个鱼 → 一条鱼
-
Chinese speakers learning English/Spanish: Adding unnecessary measure words: a piece of book → a book
-
Confusing systems: Treating Chinese classifiers like Spanish gender — memorizing them as arbitrary categories rather than semantic groupings.
Related topics
- Articles: How definiteness is expressed without classifiers in Spanish and English
- Word Order: How numeral + classifier + noun fits into Chinese syntax
- Pronouns: How demonstratives interact with classifiers
- Questions: How question formation affects classifier usage
Examples
Counted noun (one book)
un libro
Demonstrative + noun
este libro
Gender system
Yes (masculine/feminine)
Classifier required
No
Classifier for animals
—
Classifier for flat objects
—
Classifier for people
—
Examples
Counted noun (one book)
a book / one book
Demonstrative + noun
this book
Gender system
No
Classifier required
No
Classifier for animals
—
Classifier for flat objects
a sheet of paper
Classifier for people
a person
Examples
Counted noun (one book)
一本书 (one [CL] book)
Demonstrative + noun
这本书 (this [CL] book)
Gender system
No
Classifier required
Yes (for count/demonstrative)
Classifier for animals
只 (small animals) / 头 (large animals)
Classifier for flat objects
张 (paper, tables, tickets)
Classifier for people
个 (general) / 位 (polite) / 口 (family members)
Comparison at a glance
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Counted noun (one book) | un libro | a book / one book | 一本书 (one [CL] book) |
| Demonstrative + noun | este libro | this book | 这本书 (this [CL] book) |
| Gender system | Yes (masculine/feminine) | No | No |
| Classifier required | No | No | Yes (for count/demonstrative) |
| Classifier for animals | — | — | 只 (small animals) / 头 (large animals) |
| Classifier for flat objects | — | a sheet of paper | 张 (paper, tables, tickets) |
| Classifier for people | — | a person | 个 (general) / 位 (polite) / 口 (family members) |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Side-by-side comparison
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Counted noun (one book) | un libro | a book / one book | 一本书 (one [CL] book) |
| Demonstrative + noun | este libro | this book | 这本书 (this [CL] book) |
| Gender system | Yes (masculine/feminine) | No | No |
| Classifier required | No | No | Yes (for count/demonstrative) |
| Classifier for animals | — | — | 只 (small animals) / 头 (large animals) |
| Classifier for flat objects | — | a sheet of paper | 张 (paper, tables, tickets) |
| Classifier for people | — | a person | 个 (general) / 位 (polite) / 口 (family members) |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Examples in context
Counted noun (one book)
Spanish
un libro
English
a book / one book
Chinese
一本书 (one [CL] book)
Demonstrative + noun
Spanish
este libro
English
this book
Chinese
这本书 (this [CL] book)
Gender system
Spanish
Yes (masculine/feminine)
English
No
Chinese
No
Classifier required
Spanish
No
English
No
Chinese
Yes (for count/demonstrative)
Classifier for animals
Spanish
—
English
—
Chinese
只 (small animals) / 头 (large animals)
Classifier for flat objects
Spanish
—
English
a sheet of paper
Chinese
张 (paper, tables, tickets)
Classifier for people
Spanish
—
English
a person
Chinese
个 (general) / 位 (polite) / 口 (family members)
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Key Takeaways
Spanish: No classifiers. Instead, every noun has a grammatical gender (masculine/feminine) that determines article and adjective agreement.
English: No classifiers. Uses articles (a, the) or bare nouns. Occasional measure words exist (a sheet of paper, a bottle of water) but are rare.
Chinese: Extensive classifier system. Every noun belongs to a semantic category that determines which classifier to use.
Key concepts compared: Counted noun (one book), Demonstrative + noun, Gender system.
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Last updated: June 4, 2026