-
1.[So] is used as a particle.
It is also occasionally used as a noun.
2.Used as a particle 1The word "所" is often used before a verb, verb-object group or adjective to form a noun "所" character structure, which has a referential effect. It generally acts as a subject or object.
It is equivalent to "......(people, things, places)", or "......(people, things, places)".
-
The + verb" is a particle. Such as: for my use. Difference.
-
Used before the verb to represent the thing that receives the action: 部 (the army led).Predicate (a.).
Spoken; b.What some people say, implies non-recognition).Meaningless (don't care, don't care).
Yes. To each his best. To the invincible.
Yes If you don't do something, you can do something.
The above explanation can be understood as pronouns.
-
The verb is basically added after the so, the desire refers to what you want, and the desire is a verb; The will is the place where the mark is made, and the mark is also a verb. In modern Chinese, such an added verb has a special noun called the so-word structure.
-
And one more.
for ......"So" means passive Example: No, if it is all and is captured. - Hongmen Banquet
Example: Win the news that Ji's father was killed.
-
Generally speaking, it is an added verb, but there are special cases, such as: it is better to have what you want than the living, where desire means to want something, as a noun. Therefore, the verb is not necessarily added after it.
-
Therefore, in modern Chinese, it is a conjunction that expresses the connection between the previous and the next, and in classical Chinese it is a phrase, and "yu" is a preposition, which can be expressed to, right, cause, self, etc.; "Yes" is the pronoun, this, this. "Thus", as a phrase, can mean: thence, thus, henceforth, and so on.
With the development of the Chinese language, "so" has gradually solidified in classical Chinese, which is equivalent to the meaning of modern Chinese. It can be used at the beginning of a sentence without a particle. Since there are no punctuation marks in classical Chinese, in order to indicate a pause in tone, you can add "者" and "hu", such as "then" and "then", which only indicate a pause.
-
"then" is used at the beginning of the sentence to mean "thus".
-
1. Put it before a verb or verb phrase to form a noun phrase. means "....Places", "people", "things." "The Teacher Says": "The existence of the Tao is also the existence of the teacher." ”
2. Echoing with "for", constituting "for..."So....The "Theory of the Six Kingdoms": "and the catastrophe of accumulating prestige for the Qin people".
-
Yes drip! Noun phrase. Before post-grooming...However, there are exceptions in classical Chinese, and they are generally not examined. There are only a handful of them.
-
Noun phrase. What is said is what is said.
-
1.Used as a pronoun, there are several situations:
1) It is possible to substitute people, things, and things. Most of the generations are in the third person. Translated as"him"(them),"it"(them). As an object or conjunctive, not as a subject.
For example, make "The Teacher Says" to praise it. ("The Teacher Says", on behalf of the person, as an object.) And so it is. ("Persuasion of Learning", substitute things, as a concurrent language.) )
Man is not born to know. ("The Teacher Says", acting as an object.) (2) Demonstrative pronouns, close to the point. It can be translated as:"This", usually used as a compound referential terminative. Such as:
Two strategies. ("The Biography of Lian Po Lin Xiangru").
-
Prepositions have a bit of a practical meaning and denote a relationship between direction and position.
Mood particles denote a certain emotional attitude.
Nothing else is true, don't worry about it.
-
Conjunctions, are imaginary words used as connections in sentences. It is used within a single sentence to connect words to words, words to phrases, or phrases to phrases; It is used in a compound sentence to connect two clauses.
A preposition is a virtual word in a sentence that introduces nouns, noun phrases, pronouns, etc., to verbs and adjectives, or to verbal phrases and adjective phrases. The preposition and the word it "introduces" form a prepositional object group that mainly acts as an adverbial or complement in a sentence.
Modal words are imaginary words in a sentence that are used with other words to express various tones such as affirmation, narration, exclamation, and questioning. Some of the modal words are at the beginning of the sentence, some are in the middle of the sentence, and some are at the end of the sentence.
All the high school classical Chinese texts are as follows: >>>More
1.Go to a high place and live. For example, the Eastern Han Dynasty Xu Shen's "Sayings": Yes, it is high. >>>More
Rise; Stand up. "Hongmen Banquet": "Sit for a while, Pei Gong gets up to go to the toilet." ” >>>More
Let's start with the familiar pronunciation of céng: there are three commonly used common meanings: (1) Once: >>>More
1. Intense dissatisfaction or hatred towards people or things. 2. Strong resentment or hatred. >>>More