Measure Words (Chinese)

Definition:

Chinese measure words (量词, liàngcí), also called classifiers, are obligatory grammatical elements that must appear between a numeral or demonstrative and a noun in Mandarin and other Chinese varieties. The numeral-noun sequence is ungrammatical without the appropriate measure word: “three books” in English corresponds to san ben shu (three [volume-MW] book) — not san shu alone. Each noun semantically belongs to a class associated with a specific measure word, and learners must acquire both the noun and its appropriate classifier. Measure words are a grammatical category absent from most European languages, making them a distinctive and challenging acquisition target in Mandarin grammar for L2 learners.


Structure

Numeral + Measure Word + Noun:

`SAN (3) + BEN (volume-MW) + SHU (book) = san ben shu` (three books)

Common Measure Words

Measure WordPinyinSemantic classExample nouns
General/defaultpeople, things, ideas (一个人, 一个东西)
benBook-like volumesbooks, magazines (一本书, 一本杂志)
zhangFlat, sheet-likepaper, maps, photographs (一张纸, 一张照片)
tiáoLong and flexiblerivers, fish, snakes, trousers (一条鱼, 一条裤子)
zhiSmall animals, one of a paircats, birds, hands (一只猫, 一只鸟)
táiMachines, appliancescomputers, TVs (一台电脑, 一台电视)
liàngVehiclescars, bicycles (一辆车, 一辆自行车)
kePlants/treestrees, plants (一棵树, 一棵草)
kuàiChunky objects/moneyrocks, currency (一块石头, 一块钱)
jiànAffairs; upper-body garmentsmatters, shirts (一件事, 一件衣服)

Demonstratives with Measure Words

Demonstratives also require measure words:

  • zhè (this) + ben + shu = 这本书 — this book
  • nà (that) + gè + rén = 那个人 — that person

Verbal Measure Words

Chinese also has verbal measure words that quantify verbal events:

  • 打了三 — hit three times (punches); shuō le yī biàn — said it once ( = from beginning to end)

History

Classifier systems are typologically found across East and Southeast Asian languages (Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Burmese, etc.) as well as in languages of other areas. In Chinese, the classifier system expanded and grammaticalized over the historical periods; Classical Chinese used fewer classifiers, and many modern classifiers have concrete noun origins that reveal their semantic motivation.

Common Misconceptions

  • “个 (gè) can be used for everything” is the most flexible and neutral measure word and is used as a default when the correct classifier is unknown, but it is not native-like for all nouns (e.g., animals and books have distinct classifiers)
  • “Measure words are just like English ‘piece of’ or ‘cup of’” — English uses such constructions only for mass nouns; Chinese classifiers apply to count nouns as well, with different semantic logic

Criticisms

  • L2 Chinese courses often teach as a universal workaround, which leads to fossilization; learners need active exposure to variety in measure word selection

Social Media Sentiment

Measure words are frequently cited by Chinese learners as a “why does this exist?” feature, though intermediate learners often report finding them intuitive once enough vocabulary is internalized. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Teach high-frequency measure words alongside the nouns they apply to — never teach shu (book) without teaching ben as its classifier
  • Use the default explicitly as a fallback but emphasize that correct classifiers are part of each noun’s vocabulary entry

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Li, C. N., & Thompson, S. A. (1981). Mandarin Chinese: A Functional Reference Grammar. University of California Press. — Comprehensive coverage of Chinese classifiers/measure words.
  • Erbaugh, M. S. (1986). Taking stock: The development of Chinese noun classifiers historically and in young children. In C. Craig (Ed.), Noun Classes and Categorization (pp. 399–436). — Historical and acquisition study of Chinese classifiers.
  • Chao, Y. R. (1968). A Grammar of Spoken Chinese. University of California Press. — Classic reference including extensive classifier coverage.