There is a difference between doing and making in Chinese words

Updated on culture 2024-04-19
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    "作" and "do" are both commonly used words, with the same sound, and sometimes universal, so it is difficult to use and I don't know which word to use.

    Zuo is an ancient word, which is found in the oracle bone inscription, and the original meaning is "to rise", and the "work" in "cheer up", "one blow", and "gunshot" still used in modern Chinese are all the meaning of "rise". In this sense, there is no fight with "doing", because "doing" has no such meaning.

    "Doing" and "doing" both have the meaning of "engaged", "made", and "acted", so it is easy to confuse.

    Do, is a post-made word, which first appeared in the Song and Yuan dynasties, when "even", "broadcast", and "pretentious" are spoken. By the Ming Dynasty, "do" became a vulgar word for "made", and gradually evolved into a synonym for "made".

    Distinguish. 1) The basic criterion for the distinction is "Wen" and "Bai", and words with abstract content or heavy color in written language are generally used as "作", and idioms are used as "作".

    2) When used as a monosyllabic verb, most of them use "do", and a few use "do", and their object content is also relatively abstract. The object is a gerund (e.g., report, investigate, set an example, handle, mobilize, contribute), and it is also generally used as "to do".

    3) "Doing" in the sense of identity, achievement, behavior, etc., use "doing".

    4) When encountering a word that you are not sure of, it is better to write "作" rather than "do", but to achieve partial (an article or a book) unity.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Do is the verb that denotes the action whereas do is the imaginary word that denotes what to do.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Do what... What to do ...

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    (1) "Make" and "make", there is a literal difference between the two. In terms of verb meaning, both "do" and "do" can mean to engage in a certain activity. But "do" is often used to mean to be, to act and act or to write and work, while "do" also means to make and make.

    ii) "Make" and "make" are different for the act. All actions that are achieved through specific behaviors are "made"; All actions that are achieved through abstract actions are "made".

    3) The precedent of "make" and "make" is different. Generally speaking, the preposition of "make" is mostly for specific people, while the preposition of "make" is mostly for organizations or collectives.

    For example, "contributing", "making choices", "making concessions", and "making decisions", here "contributions", "choices", and "decisions" are not concrete and direct things; And the objects involved in the actions of "making a grimace", "making a difficult action" and "making a difficult problem" are all concrete things.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Do is a verb, while 作 is often combined with other words to form a noun, such as homework operation work writer.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The specific differences are:

    1 Both "doing" and "doing" mean "engaging in an activity", and it is generally believed that "doing" means a concrete action, while "doing" means an abstract action.

    2 "Make" has the meaning of "pretending", such as "making a half-dead appearance", and in this sense, "making a grimace" can also be changed to "making a grimace to touch the elder".

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