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Key Chinese grammar structure: modifier + de + noun (的)

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This grammar structure is one of the most basic and important features of Chinese grammar:

padding-bottom: 60%;">Key Chinese grammar structure: modifier + de + noun (的)

modifier + 的 + noun

This comes up all the time in all sorts of sentences in Chinese. It follows the general rule that what precedes modifies what follows - first the modifier, then 的 (de) to link them, and then the noun.

Noun + 的 + noun

This may be the most basic grammar structure with 的. By placing 的 between two nouns, you can indicate possession. That is, the second noun belongs to the first. Some examples:

你的衣服
nǐ de yīfú
your clothes
小李的朋友
Xiǎo Lǐ de péngyǒu
Xiao Li's friend
他們的錢
tāmen de qián
their money
You can think of 的 as being similar to ’s (apostrophe s) in English. It marks possession in the same way and appears between the two nouns. More example of 的 behaving like ’s:

小王的房子
Xiǎo Wáng de fángzi
Xiao Wang's house
趙先生的自行車
Zhào Xiānshēng de zìxíngchē
Mr Zhao's bike
老張的貓
Lǎo Zhāng de māo
Old Zhang's cat
And now some full example sentences with 的 showing possession between two nouns:

這是你的嗎?
Zhè shì nǐ de ma?
Is this yours?
那是他們的。
Nà shì tāmen de.
It's theirs.
我喜歡你的帽子。
Wǒ xǐhuan nǐ de màozi.
I like your hat.
This noun + 的 + noun structure is one of the most basic grammar structures in Chinese. It should be one of the first structures that learners get familiar with.

Adjective + 的 + noun

As well as marking actual possession between two nouns, 的 is also used to modify things more generally. What it actually does is attach attributes to things.

One way 的 can attach attributes to things is by appearing between an adjective and a noun. This simply links the adjective to the noun to describe it. Some examples:

紅色的衣服
hóngsè de yīfu
red clothes
好吃的菜
hǎochī de cài
tasty food
漂亮的花
piàoliang de huā
beautiful flowers
You could think of this as literally saying e.g. “red’s clothes” or “clothes that belong to red”. This is the standard way of linking adjectives to nouns in Chinese grammar.

Some full example sentences for this adjective + 的 + noun grammar structure:

我喜歡很辣的菜。
Wǒ xǐhuan hěn là de cài.
I like spicy food.
她是個很無聊的人。
Tā shì ge hěn wúliáo de rén.
She is a very boring person.
這是一種很濃的咖啡。
Zhè shì yìzhǒng hěn nóng de kāfēi.
This is a very strong kind of coffee.
By now you can see that 的 is a very versatile linking word in Chinese. It appears all over the place, and is generally considered the most commonly used Chinese character.

clause + 的 + noun

Finally, we’ll have a look at a slightly more complicated 的 grammar structure. Because 的 can be used to attach pretty much anything to anything else, you can use it to link entire phrases to things. The phrase then becomes a description or quality.

This sounds complicated but it will probably become clearer with some examples:

我買的茶
wǒ mǎi de chá
the tea I bought
他喜歡的那個女孩
Tā xǐhuan de nàge nǚhái
that girl he likes
你最喜歡的顏色
nǐ zuì xǐhuan de yánsè
your favourite colour (the colour you like the most)
In those examples, rather than a noun or an adjective, we have a phrase (e.g. 我買 - “I buy”). The phrase is linked to a noun using 的, and becomes a description or attribute of the noun.

Some more examples of this modifying clause / phrase with 的:

他弄丟的東西
tā nòng diū de dōngxi
the thing he lost
我不認識的一個人
wǒ bù rènshi de yīge rén
someone that I don't know
我們第一次見到彼此的地方
wǒmen dì yī cì jiàn dào bǐcǐ dì dìfāng
the place where we first met
昨天跟我一塊兒吃飯的那個人
zuótiān gēn wǒ yīkuàir chīfàn dì nàge rén
the person with whom I ate yesterday
Notice how you can attach quite complicated things to a noun using 的. That whole complex phrase just becomes an attribute of the noun. Have a look at some full example sentences for this structure:

他們買的自行車很便宜。
Tāmen mǎi de zìxíngchē hěn piányi.
The bike they bought is very cheap.
這是我看過最好看的書。
Zhè shì wǒ kànguò zuì hǎo kàn de shū.
This is the best book I've ever read.
你是第一個這樣做的人。
Nǐ shì dì yī gè zhèyàng zuò de rén.
You are the first person to do it this way.

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