Topics
BeginnerNegation
How sentences are negated in Spanish, English and Chinese.
Compare languages
English needs 'do' support for negation. Spanish simply places 'no' before the verb. Chinese places 不 or 没 before the verb — with no auxiliary needed.
Overview
Negation turns a positive statement into a negative one. Each language has its own mechanics.
- Spanish: Places no directly before the verb. Double negatives are not only allowed but common. Negative pronouns (nada, nadie, ninguno) reinforce rather than cancel negation.
- English: Requires the auxiliary do for most verbs. Double negatives are ungrammatical. Negative concord does not exist.
- Chinese: Places 不 or 没 before the verb. No auxiliary needed. The choice between 不 and 没 depends on aspect (habitual vs completed).
Spanish
Spanish negation is straightforward: put no before the verb.
Simple negation
- No vengo. (I don’t come.)
- No es verdad. (It’s not true.)
- No tienen dinero. (They don’t have money.)
Double negatives
Spanish reinforces negation with additional negative words:
- No veo nada. (I don’t see anything. — lit. “I don’t see nothing”)
- No viene nadie. (Nobody is coming. — lit. “Not nobody comes”)
- No tengo ningún problema. (I don’t have any problem.)
Rule: Once the sentence is negative with no, all indefinite pronouns become negative.
Negative pronouns
| Affirmative | Negative | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| algo | nada | nothing |
| alguien | nadie | nobody |
| alguno | ninguno | none |
| siempre | nunca | never |
| también | tampoco | neither |
Negation without no
In replies, no can be omitted:
- ¿Vienes? — Nunca. (Are you coming? — Never.)
- ¿Tienes algo? — Nada. (Do you have anything? — Nothing.)
English
English negation is more complex because it requires auxiliary support.
Simple negation with do
For most verbs, use do/does/did + not:
- I do not like coffee.
- She does not speak Spanish.
- They did not arrive on time.
Be and modals (no do needed)
With be and modal verbs, negate directly:
- I am not tired.
- She cannot swim.
- They will not come.
Negative pronouns
| Pronoun | Example |
|---|---|
| nothing | I know nothing. |
| nobody / no one | Nobody came. |
| none | I want none. |
| never | I never eat meat. |
| neither | I like neither option. |
No double negatives
English does not allow double negatives:
- ❌ I don’t know nothing. → ✅ I don’t know anything.
- ❌ Nobody never came. → ✅ Nobody ever came.
The second negative cancels the first, creating a logical positive — which is not what the speaker intends.
Negative questions
Negative questions expect confirmation:
- Aren’t you coming? (I thought you were.)
- Didn’t she call? (I expected her to.)
Chinese
Chinese negation uses two particles: 不 and 没. No auxiliary verb needed.
不 — habitual, future, or general negation
不 negates actions that are habitual, intentional, or in the future:
- 我不喜欢咖啡。(I don’t like coffee. — general/habitual)
- 明天我不去。(Tomorrow I’m not going. — future)
- 他不是老师。(He is not a teacher. — copula negation)
没 — completed actions or existence
没 negates actions that were supposed to happen but didn’t, or denies existence:
- 我没吃早饭。(I didn’t eat breakfast. — past completion)
- 没有人。(There is nobody. — existence)
- 他没来。(He didn’t come. — expected but didn’t happen)
了 with negation
了 (completion) is not used with 没, because 没 already implies non-completion:
- ❌ 我没吃了 → ✅ 我没吃
Negative pronouns
| Affirmative | Negative | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 有人 | 没人 | 没人知道 |
| 有什么 | 没有什么 | 没有什么问题 |
| 总是 | 从不 / 从来没 | 我从不抽烟 |
Double negation in Chinese
Chinese double negation creates a positive meaning (like English):
- 我不是不知道。(It’s not that I don’t know. → I do know.)
Comparison at a glance
| Feature | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple negation | no + verb | do + not + verb | 不/没 + verb |
| Auxiliary needed | No | Yes (do/be/modal) | No |
| Double negative | Reinforces | Cancels (ungrammatical) | Cancels (positive) |
| Negative pronouns | nada, nadie, ninguno | nothing, nobody, none | 没人, 没有什么 |
| Negation of be | no + ser/estar | am/is/are + not | 不是 |
| Negation of have | no + tener | do/does + not + have | 没有 |
| Past negation | no + preterite/imperfect | did + not + verb | 没 + verb |
Examples in context
I don’t like it
- ES: No me gusta.
- EN: I don’t like it.
- ZH: 我不喜欢。
Nobody came
- ES: No vino nadie.
- EN: Nobody came.
- ZH: 没人来。
I didn’t eat
- ES: No comí.
- EN: I didn’t eat.
- ZH: 我没吃。
Common mistakes
-
Spanish/Chinese speakers learning English: Forgetting ‘do’ in negation: I not like → I do not like
-
English/Spanish speakers learning Chinese: Using 不 for everything: 我不吃 (I won’t eat) when they mean 我没吃 (I didn’t eat)
-
Spanish speakers learning English: Double negatives: I don’t know nothing → I don’t know anything
-
English speakers learning Spanish: Avoiding double negatives: No veo algo → No veo nada
Related topics
- Questions: How negation appears in tag questions and rhetorical questions
- Verb Tenses: How aspect (completed vs habitual) determines 不 vs 没 in Chinese
- Word Order: How negation particles fit into Chinese sentence structure
- Pronouns: How negative pronouns replace affirmative ones
Examples
Simple negation
no + verb
Negation of 'to be'
no + ser/estar
Negation of 'to have'
no + tener
Double negative
Allowed (reinforces negation)
Negative pronouns
nadie, nada, ninguno
Negative questions
¿No vienes?
Examples
Simple negation
do/does/did + not + verb
Negation of 'to be'
am/is/are + not
Negation of 'to have'
do/does + not + have
Double negative
Ungrammatical
Negative pronouns
nobody, nothing, none
Negative questions
Aren't you coming?
Examples
Simple negation
不 / 没 + verb
Negation of 'to be'
不 + 是
Negation of 'to have'
没有
Double negative
Ungrammatical
Negative pronouns
没人, 没有什么
Negative questions
你不来吗?
Comparison at a glance
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple negation | no + verb | do/does/did + not + verb | 不 / 没 + verb |
| Negation of 'to be' | no + ser/estar | am/is/are + not | 不 + 是 |
| Negation of 'to have' | no + tener | do/does + not + have | 没有 |
| Double negative | Allowed (reinforces negation) | Ungrammatical | Ungrammatical |
| Negative pronouns | nadie, nada, ninguno | nobody, nothing, none | 没人, 没有什么 |
| Negative questions | ¿No vienes? | Aren't you coming? | 你不来吗? |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Side-by-side comparison
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple negation | no + verb | do/does/did + not + verb | 不 / 没 + verb |
| Negation of 'to be' | no + ser/estar | am/is/are + not | 不 + 是 |
| Negation of 'to have' | no + tener | do/does + not + have | 没有 |
| Double negative | Allowed (reinforces negation) | Ungrammatical | Ungrammatical |
| Negative pronouns | nadie, nada, ninguno | nobody, nothing, none | 没人, 没有什么 |
| Negative questions | ¿No vienes? | Aren't you coming? | 你不来吗? |
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Examples in context
Simple negation
Spanish
no + verb
English
do/does/did + not + verb
Chinese
不 / 没 + verb
Negation of 'to be'
Spanish
no + ser/estar
English
am/is/are + not
Chinese
不 + 是
Negation of 'to have'
Spanish
no + tener
English
do/does + not + have
Chinese
没有
Double negative
Spanish
Allowed (reinforces negation)
English
Ungrammatical
Chinese
Ungrammatical
Negative pronouns
Spanish
nadie, nada, ninguno
English
nobody, nothing, none
Chinese
没人, 没有什么
Negative questions
Spanish
¿No vienes?
English
Aren't you coming?
Chinese
你不来吗?
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Key Takeaways
Spanish: Places no directly before the verb. Double negatives are not only allowed but common. Negative pronouns (nada, nadie, ninguno) reinforce rat...
English: Requires the auxiliary do for most verbs. Double negatives are ungrammatical. Negative concord does not exist.
Chinese: Places 不bù or 没méi before the verb. No auxiliary needed. The choice between 不bù and 没méi depends on aspect (habitual vs completed).
Key concepts compared: Simple negation, Negation of 'to be', Negation of 'to have'.
Last updated: June 4, 2026