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Formal vs Informal Register

How politeness, formality and social distance are encoded in Spanish, English and Chinese.

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Spanish uses distinct pronoun and verb forms (tú/usted). English relies on intonation, word choice and titles. Chinese uses nín, honorifics, and sentence-final particles to soften commands.

Examples

You (singular informal)

tú (voseo in some regions)

You (singular formal)

usted

You (plural informal)

vosotros (Spain) / ustedes (Latin America)

You (plural formal)

ustedes (Spain formal) / ustedes (Latin America, all)

Verb form change

Yes (conjugated differently)

Greeting (Hello)

hola / buenos días

Request softening

por favor / ¿podría? / subjunctive

Title + surname

Señor/señora + surname

Examples

You (singular informal)

you

You (singular formal)

you (no distinction)

You (plural informal)

you / you guys / y'all

You (plural formal)

you / you all

Verb form change

No

Greeting (Hello)

hi / hello / good morning

Request softening

please / could you / would you mind

Title + surname

Mr./Ms./Mrs. + surname

Examples

You (singular informal)

You (singular formal)

nín

You (plural informal)

men

You (plural formal)

nínmen (rare)

Verb form change

No

Greeting (Hello)

hǎo / nínhǎo

Request softening

qǐng / ba / fan

Title + surname

xìng + xiānshēng / shì / lǎoshī

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
You (singular informal) tú (voseo in some regions)you
You (singular formal) ustedyou (no distinction)nín
You (plural informal) vosotros (Spain) / ustedes (Latin America)you / you guys / y'allmen
You (plural formal) ustedes (Spain formal) / ustedes (Latin America, all)you / you allnínmen (rare)
Verb form change Yes (conjugated differently)NoNo
Greeting (Hello) hola / buenos díashi / hello / good morninghǎo / nínhǎo
Request softening por favor / ¿podría? / subjunctiveplease / could you / would you mindqǐng / ba / fan
Title + surname Señor/señora + surnameMr./Ms./Mrs. + surnamexìng + xiānshēng / shì / lǎoshī

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
You (singular informal) tú (voseo in some regions)you
You (singular formal) ustedyou (no distinction)nín
You (plural informal) vosotros (Spain) / ustedes (Latin America)you / you guys / y'allmen
You (plural formal) ustedes (Spain formal) / ustedes (Latin America, all)you / you allnínmen (rare)
Verb form change Yes (conjugated differently)NoNo
Greeting (Hello) hola / buenos díashi / hello / good morninghǎo / nínhǎo
Request softening por favor / ¿podría? / subjunctiveplease / could you / would you mindqǐng / ba / fan
Title + surname Señor/señora + surnameMr./Ms./Mrs. + surnamexìng + xiānshēng / shì / lǎoshī

Examples in context

You (singular informal)

Spanish

tú (voseo in some regions)

English

you

Chinese

You (singular formal)

Spanish

usted

English

you (no distinction)

Chinese

nín

You (plural informal)

Spanish

vosotros (Spain) / ustedes (Latin America)

English

you / you guys / y'all

Chinese

men

You (plural formal)

Spanish

ustedes (Spain formal) / ustedes (Latin America, all)

English

you / you all

Chinese

nínmen (rare)

Verb form change

Spanish

Yes (conjugated differently)

English

No

Chinese

No

Greeting (Hello)

Spanish

hola / buenos días

English

hi / hello / good morning

Chinese

hǎo / nínhǎo

Request softening

Spanish

por favor / ¿podría? / subjunctive

English

please / could you / would you mind

Chinese

qǐng / ba / fan

Title + surname

Spanish

Señor/señora + surname

English

Mr./Ms./Mrs. + surname

Chinese

xìng + xiānshēng / shì / lǎoshī

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Has a T-V distinction (tú vs usted) with separate verb conjugations. Regional variation is significant (vos in Argentina, vosotros in Spain)...

English: No pronoun distinction for formality. Politeness is expressed through modal verbs (could vs can), hedging (I was wondering if...), titles (M...

Chinese: Uses 您nín (nín) as the formal "you." Honorific titles are extremely important. Sentence-final particles (吧bā, 啊ā, 嘛má) soften requests. The ...

Key concepts compared: You (singular informal), You (singular formal), You (plural informal).

Last updated: June 4, 2026