If you want to speak Chinese naturally, vocabulary alone is not enough. You also need to understand how sentences are built. That’s where sentence patterns come in.
Chinese sentence patterns are actually more logical and consistent than English. Once you understand a few core structures, you can create hundreds of sentences easily.

In this guide, we’ll break down the most important Chinese sentence patterns step by step, with clear examples you can start using right away.
1. The Basic Sentence Structure
The most important pattern in Chinese is:
Subject + Verb + Object
This is very similar to English.
Examples:
我吃饭。
wǒ chī fàn
I eat.
他看书。
tā kàn shū
He reads a book.
她喝咖啡。
tā hē kāfēi
She drinks coffee.
我们学中文。
wǒmen xué Zhōngwén
We study Chinese.
This is your foundation. Almost every sentence builds on this.
2. Adding Time: When Does the Action Happen
In Chinese, time usually comes before the verb.
Structure:
Subject + Time + Verb + Object
Examples:
我今天上班。
wǒ jīntiān shàngbān
I go to work today.
他昨天看电影。
tā zuótiān kàn diànyǐng
He watched a movie yesterday.
我们明天去学校。
wǒmen míngtiān qù xuéxiào
We will go to school tomorrow.
Common time words include:
- 今天 (jīntiān) today
- 昨天 (zuótiān) yesterday
- 明天 (míngtiān) tomorrow
3. Adding Location: Where the Action Happens
Location usually comes before the verb as well.
Structure:
Subject + 在 (zài) + Place + Verb + Object
Examples:
我在家吃饭。
wǒ zài jiā chī fàn
I eat at home.
他在办公室 (办公室, bàngōngshì) 工作。
tā zài bàngōngshì gōngzuò
He works in the office.
我们在学校学习。
wǒmen zài xuéxiào xuéxí
We study at school.
4. Time + Location Together
When both time and place are used, the order is:
Subject + Time + 在 + Place + Verb + Object
Examples:
我今天在家学习。
wǒ jīntiān zài jiā xuéxí
I study at home today.
他昨天在餐厅 (餐厅, cāntīng) 吃饭。
tā zuótiān zài cāntīng chī fàn
He ate at a restaurant yesterday.
我们明天在公司 (公司, gōngsī) 开会。
wǒmen míngtiān zài gōngsī kāihuì
We will have a meeting at the company tomorrow.
5. Using 是 (shì) for “To Be”
是 (shì) is used to connect nouns.
Structure:
Subject + 是 (shì) + Noun
Examples:
我是学生。
wǒ shì xuéshēng
I am a student.
他是老师 (老师, lǎoshī)。
tā shì lǎoshī
He is a teacher.
这是书。
zhè shì shū
This is a book.
Important: Do not use 是 with adjectives.
6. Using Adjectives as Predicates
In Chinese, adjectives can act as verbs.
Structure:
Subject + Adjective
Examples:
她很漂亮。
tā hěn piàoliang
She is very beautiful.
天气很好。
tiānqì hěn hǎo
The weather is very good.
这个房间很大。
zhège fángjiān hěn dà
This room is very big.
Notice the use of 很 (hěn). It often doesn’t mean “very,” but just makes the sentence sound natural.
7. Asking Questions
There are two main ways to ask questions.
Using 吗 (ma):
你是学生吗?
nǐ shì xuéshēng ma
Are you a student?
他在家吗?
tā zài jiā ma
Is he at home?
Using question words:
你去哪儿?
nǐ qù nǎr
Where are you going?
他什么时候来?
tā shénme shíhou lái
When will he come?
8. Using 有 (yǒu) for “Have” and “There Is”
有 (yǒu) is very important.
Structure 1: Have
我有一本书。
wǒ yǒu yì běn shū
I have a book.
他有很多朋友。
tā yǒu hěn duō péngyou
He has many friends.
Structure 2: There is/are
桌子上有一杯水。
zhuōzi shàng yǒu yì bēi shuǐ
There is a cup of water on the table.
9. Using Modal Verbs
Modal verbs like 会 (huì), 能 (néng), 可以 (kěyǐ) come before the main verb.
Structure:
Subject + Modal Verb + Main Verb
Examples:
我会说中文。
wǒ huì shuō Zhōngwén
I can speak Chinese.
他能来。
tā néng lái
He can come.
你可以进去。
nǐ kěyǐ jìnqù
You may go in.
10. Using 把 (bǎ) Sentences
This pattern emphasizes the result of an action.
Structure:
Subject + 把 (bǎ) + Object + Verb
Examples:
我把书放在桌子上。
wǒ bǎ shū fàng zài zhuōzi shàng
I put the book on the table.
他把门打开。
tā bǎ mén dǎkāi
He opens the door.
11. Using 被 (bèi) Sentences (Passive Voice)
被 (bèi) is used to show passive actions.
Structure:
Subject + 被 (bèi) + Doer + Verb
Examples:
书被他拿走了。
shū bèi tā názǒu le
The book was taken by him.
门被风关上了。
mén bèi fēng guān shàng le
The door was closed by the wind.
12. Connecting Ideas with 和 (hé)
和 (hé) means “and.”
Examples:
我和他去学校。
wǒ hé tā qù xuéxiào
He and I go to school.
她买苹果和香蕉。
tā mǎi píngguǒ hé xiāngjiāo
She buys apples and bananas.
13. Expressing Frequency
Use words like 常常 (chángcháng) and 每天 (měitiān).
Examples:
我每天学习中文。
wǒ měitiān xuéxí Zhōngwén
I study Chinese every day.
他常常去商店 (商店, shāngdiàn)。
tā chángcháng qù shāngdiàn
He often goes to the store.
14. Real-Life Sentences Combining Everything
我今天在家看书。
wǒ jīntiān zài jiā kàn shū
I read at home today.
他明天可以来公司 (公司, gōngsī)。
tā míngtiān kěyǐ lái gōngsī
He can come to the company tomorrow.
我们在餐厅吃饭。
wǒmen zài cāntīng chī fàn
We eat at the restaurant.
她有一个问题。
tā yǒu yí gè wèntí
She has a question.
15. Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Wrong word order
Incorrect: 我吃饭在家
Correct: 我在家吃饭 (wǒ zài jiā chī fàn)
Mistake 2: Using 是 with adjectives
Incorrect: 她是漂亮
Correct: 她很漂亮 (tā hěn piàoliang)
Mistake 3: Forgetting time placement
Incorrect: 我去今天学校
Correct: 我今天去学校 (wǒ jīntiān qù xuéxiào)
16. Final Thoughts
Chinese sentence patterns are not as complicated as they seem. In fact, they are very structured and predictable.
If you focus on:
- Subject + Verb + Object
- Time before verb
- Place before verb
you can already build most everyday sentences.
The key is practice. Start with simple patterns, then slowly combine them. Over time, forming Chinese sentences will feel natural and automatic.
New Vocabulary from This Post
句子 (jùzi)- sentence
时间 (shíjiān)- time
地方 (dìfang)- place
办公室 (bàngōngshì)- office
餐厅 (cāntīng)- restaurant
公司 (gōngsī)- company
老师 (lǎoshī)- teacher
朋友 (péngyou)- friend
问题 (wèntí)- question
打开 (dǎkāi)- to open
关上 (guān shàng)- to close
香蕉 (xiāngjiāo)- banana
常常 (chángcháng)- often
每天 (měitiān)- every day
房间 (fángjiān)- room































