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Negation

How sentences are negated in Spanish, English and Chinese.

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English needs 'do' support for negation. Spanish simply places 'no' before the verb. Chinese places or méi before the verb — with no auxiliary needed.

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

/ méi + verb

Negation of 'to be'

+ shì

Negation of 'to have'

méiyǒu

Double negative

Ungrammatical

Negative pronouns

méirén, méiyǒushénme

Negative questions

láima

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Simple negation no + verbdo/does/did + not + verb / méi + verb
Negation of 'to be' no + ser/estaram/is/are + not + shì
Negation of 'to have' no + tenerdo/does + not + haveméiyǒu
Double negative Allowed (reinforces negation)UngrammaticalUngrammatical
Negative pronouns nadie, nada, ningunonobody, nothing, noneméirén, méiyǒushénme
Negative questions ¿No vienes?Aren't you coming?láima

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Simple negation no + verbdo/does/did + not + verb / méi + verb
Negation of 'to be' no + ser/estaram/is/are + not + shì
Negation of 'to have' no + tenerdo/does + not + haveméiyǒu
Double negative Allowed (reinforces negation)UngrammaticalUngrammatical
Negative pronouns nadie, nada, ningunonobody, nothing, noneméirén, méiyǒushénme
Negative questions ¿No vienes?Aren't you coming?láima

Examples in context

Simple negation

Spanish

no + verb

English

do/does/did + not + verb

Chinese

/ méi + verb

Negation of 'to be'

Spanish

no + ser/estar

English

am/is/are + not

Chinese

+ shì

Negation of 'to have'

Spanish

no + tener

English

do/does + not + have

Chinese

méiyǒu

Double negative

Spanish

Allowed (reinforces negation)

English

Ungrammatical

Chinese

Ungrammatical

Negative pronouns

Spanish

nadie, nada, ninguno

English

nobody, nothing, none

Chinese

méirén, méiyǒushénme

Negative questions

Spanish

¿No vienes?

English

Aren't you coming?

Chinese

láima

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