Chinese Measure Words Explained: 个, 张, 条 & the Essential System

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Mandarin Grammar · The Essentials

Chinese Measure Words, Made Simple

You can’t say “three books” in Chinese without a little word in between — the measure word. There are dozens, but about a dozen cover daily life, and 个 rescues you whenever you’re stuck. Audio on every example.

数 + 量 + 名
Number, then measure word, then noun — 三书 (three books)
个 — the safe default
Forgotten the right one? 一… is always understood
Match the noun
Flat? 张. Long & thin? 条. Animal? 只. The right word sounds natural.

Why can’t you just say “three books” in Chinese? Because a number can’t sit straight against a noun. Between them goes a measure word (量词 liàngcí) — so “three books” is 三书, and “two cats” is 两猫. Every countable noun has one. English does this occasionally (“two sheets of paper”, “a cup of tea”); Chinese does it for everything. The good news: a dozen measure words cover daily life, and one of them — 个 — works as a safety net whenever you forget the right one.

What a measure word does

A measure word is the bridge between a quantity and a thing. You never say 三书 (“three book”) or 三狗 (“three dog”); you say 三书 and 三狗. The pattern is fixed: number (or 这/那/几) + measure word + noun. It applies when you count, when you point (“this book”), and when you ask “how many” (几人?). Think of the English “two slices of bread” — only in Chinese, every noun needs its slice-word.

个 — the measure word you can (almost) always use

If you learn only one measure word, learn 个 (gè). It is the general-purpose classifier — the correct word for people (三个人, “three people”) and the accepted fallback for a huge range of nouns. Forget the “proper” measure word mid-sentence and 一个… will still be understood. Lean on it as a safety net — but learning the specific words below is what makes your Chinese sound natural rather than just clear.

一个人yí gè rén个 with people — “one person”
三个问题sān gè wèntí个 as the all-purpose default — “three questions”
这个zhège“this one” — 个 even works on its own

The essential measure words

These are the dozen that carry everyday conversation, grouped by the kind of noun they take. Chinese has dozens more — the Chinese Grammar Wiki catalogues them in full — but these are the ones you’ll actually use. Tap 🔊 to hear each in a natural phrase.

一本书yì běn shū本 běn — books & magazines
一张纸yì zhāng zhǐ张 zhāng — flat things: paper, tables, tickets, beds
一条鱼yì tiáo yú条 tiáo — long, thin things: fish, roads, rivers, trousers
一只猫yì zhī māo只 zhī — animals, and one of a pair (一只手)
一把椅子yì bǎ yǐzi把 bǎ — things with a handle: chairs, umbrellas, knives
一杯茶yì bēi chá杯 bēi — cups & glasses of a drink
一瓶水yì píng shuǐ瓶 píng — bottles of
一件衣服yí jiàn yīfu件 jiàn — clothing (tops) and matters/affairs (一件事)
一双鞋yì shuāng xié双 shuāng — pairs: shoes, chopsticks
一位老师yí wèi lǎoshī位 wèi — people, politely
一辆车yí liàng chē辆 liàng — vehicles: cars, bikes, buses
一座山yí zuò shān座 zuò — large, solid structures: mountains, buildings, bridges

Measure words after 这, 那 and 几

The same rule holds when you point or ask, not just when you count. After (this), (that), (which) and (how many), you still need the measure word — you simply drop the number 一: 这书 (this book), 那狗 (that dog), 哪?(which one?), 几客人 (how many guests?). Leaving the measure word out — 这书, 那狗 — is one of the most common beginner slips.

Verbal measure words — counting actions

Measure words don’t only count things — they count actions too. To say how many times you did something, a verbal measure word goes after the verb: verb + number + measure word. They’re a small set, and a few cover almost everything.

去过三次qùguo sān cì次 cì — counts occasions / times: “been there three times”
看了两遍kànle liǎng biàn遍 biàn — a complete run-through: “read it twice from start to finish”
等一下děng yíxià下 xià — softens a verb into a quick, brief action: “wait a moment”
回了一趟家huíle yí tàng jiā趟 tàng — counts round trips: “made a trip home”

The difference between 次 and 遍 is worth a moment: simply counts that something happened, while stresses doing it all the way through. “I’ve seen that film three 次” just counts the viewings; “I read the chapter two 遍” means cover to cover, twice. And one everyday cousin of the system: money is counted with (and 毛 for the smaller unit) in speech — 五钱 is “five yuan”.

Five common mistakes, fixed

✗ The error✓ The fixWhy
三书A number can’t touch a noun directly — insert a measure word
Tea is drunk by the cup — use 杯, not the generic 个
这书这 / 那 also need a measure word before the noun
Vehicles take 辆, not the animal word 只
裤子裤子Trousers are “long things” — use 条

Quick check — pick the right measure word

No tricks — just match the word to the noun. Choose the best measure word for each gap:

一 ___ 书 (a book)

三 ___ 鱼 (three fish)

一 ___ 茶 (a cup of tea)

这 ___ 车 (this car)

五 ___ 人 (five people)

There are dozens, but you don’t need them all. About 12–20 cover the vast majority of everyday situations, and 个 acts as a catch-all when you’re unsure. Learn the common ones on this page first and add the rarer ones as you meet them.
You’ll usually be understood — 个 is the general measure word and the safe fallback — but it sounds noticeably non-native for nouns that have their own classifier (一杯茶, not 一个茶). Use 个 as a safety net, and learn the common specific ones to sound natural.
Yes. 这 (this), 那 (that), 哪 (which) and 几 (how many) all take a measure word before the noun: 这本书, 那只狗, 哪个, 几位. You just drop the number 一. Leaving it out (这书, 那狗) is a very common beginner mistake.
个 (gè) — it’s the general-purpose classifier, the correct word for people (三个人), and the default for many other nouns. It’s the single most useful measure word to know.
English has a few — “two sheets of paper”, “a cup of coffee”, “a pair of shoes” — but only for certain nouns. Chinese uses a measure word for every countable noun, which is why they feel unfamiliar at first. The logic, though, is the same idea.

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