Greeting 3

Chinese Grammar
Chinese grammar is easy! In English, we might say I eat, He eats, or She ate. But in Chinese, the verb always stays the same. For example, (chī) is used no matter who the subject is or whether things happened today or yesterday.
(Wǒ chī.) I eat.
(Nǐ chī.) You eat.
(Tā chī.) She eats.
Initial Sounds
When you pronounce zh, ch, sh, and r, curl your tongue back and up against the roof of your mouth.
zhōng
(as in "jelly,")
with the tongue curled back
chī
(as in "church,")
with the tongue curled back
shì
(as in "shirt,")
with the tongue curled back
rén

midway between "
wren" and "measure," with the tongue curled back
Tone Changes
When a 3rd tone is followed by another 3rd tone, the first syllable becomes a 2nd tone.
(Nǐ ) You
很高兴。
(Ní hěn gāoxìng.) You are happy.
(Wǒ) I / me
也吃鱼。
(Wó yě chī yú.) I also eat fish.
Remember that tone changes like this usually aren’t written in pinyin. We wrote them in the sentences above just to be clear, but don’t get used to it!
不 (bù, not)
You already know that 他们 means They don’t eat and means He doesn’t go. We can also use before adjectives, in which case (hěn) is no longer needed.
他们很高兴。
(Tāmen hěn gāoxìng.) They are (very) happy.
他们高兴。
(Tāmen gāoxìng.) They are not happy.
我很忙
(Wǒ hěn máng.) I am (very) busy.
(Wǒ máng.) I am not busy.