Chinese Measure Words: Complete Guide with Examples

Master Chinese measure words (量词) with this beginner-friendly guide. Learn the 20 most common classifiers, understand the logic behind them, and practice with real examples.
Infographic showing common Chinese measure words organized by category with icons and examples

One of the trickiest parts of Chinese grammar is measure words (量词 liàngcí)—also called classifiers. Unlike English, you can’t just say “one book” or “three cats” in Chinese. You need to insert a specific word between the number and the noun.

The good news? There’s logic behind measure words, and once you understand the patterns, they become much easier!

What Are Chinese Measure Words?

In English, we say:

  • One book
  • Two cats
  • Three cups of coffee

In Chinese, you must use a measure word:

Wrong ❌Right ✅Translation
一书One book
两猫Two cats
三咖啡咖啡Three cups of coffee

The pattern is always: Number + Measure Word + Noun

Before we dive deeper, make sure you have a solid foundation in basic grammar. Check out my guide to Chinese sentence structure if you need a refresher.

Why Does Chinese Use Measure Words?

Measure words categorize nouns by their characteristics:

  • Shape: 条 for long, thin things
  • Size: 头 for large animals
  • Function: 把 for things with handles
  • Container: 杯 for cups, 瓶 for bottles

Think of measure words as noun categories. They help organize Chinese vocabulary logically.

The 20 Most Common Chinese Measure Words

1. 个 (gè) – The Universal Classifier

Use for: People, general objects, abstract concepts

Examples:

  • 人 (yī rén) – one person
  • 苹果 (sān píngguǒ) – three apples
  • 问题 (liǎng wèntí) – two questions
  • 月 (yī yuè) – one month

Pro Tip: When in doubt, use 个! It works for most nouns.

Visual chart demonstrating how the Chinese measure word 个 (gè) can be used with various nouns including people, objects, and abstract concepts

2. 本 (běn) – For Bound Items

Use for: Books, magazines, notebooks

Examples:

  • 书 (yī běn shū) – one book
  • 杂志 (liǎng běn zázhì) – two magazines
  • 笔记本 (sān běn bǐjìběn) – three notebooks

3. 只 (zhī) – For Small Animals & Certain Objects

Use for: Small animals, birds, hands, boats

Examples:

  • 猫 (yī zhī māo) – one cat
  • 狗 (liǎng zhī gǒu) – two dogs
  • 鸟 (sān zhī niǎo) – three birds
  • 手 (yī zhī shǒu) – one hand

4. 条 (tiáo) – For Long, Thin Things

Use for: Rivers, snakes, fish, pants, roads, news

Examples:

  • 河 (yī tiáo hé) – one river
  • 鱼 (liǎng tiáo yú) – two fish
  • 裤子 (sān tiáo kùzi) – three pairs of pants
  • 新闻 (yī tiáo xīnwén) – one piece of news

5. 张 (zhāng) – For Flat Things

Use for: Paper, tables, beds, photos, cards

Examples:

  • 纸 (yī zhāng zhǐ) – one piece of paper
  • 桌子 (liǎng zhāng zhuōzi) – two tables
  • 照片 (sān zhāng zhàopiàn) – three photos
  • 床 (yī zhāng chuáng) – one bed

6. 杯 (bēi) – For Cups/Glasses

Use for: Beverages in cups or glasses

Examples:

  • 咖啡 (yī bēi kāfēi) – one cup of coffee
  • 茶 (liǎng bēi chá) – two cups of tea
  • 水 (sān bēi shuǐ) – three glasses of water

7. 瓶 (píng) – For Bottles

Use for: Bottled items

Examples:

  • 水 (yī píng shuǐ) – one bottle of water
  • 啤酒 (liǎng píng píjiǔ) – two bottles of beer
  • 可乐 (sān píng kělè) – three bottles of cola

8. 件 (jiàn) – For Clothing (Upper Body) & Matters

Use for: Shirts, jackets, coats, matters/affairs

Examples:

  • 衣服 (yī jiàn yīfu) – one piece of clothing
  • T恤 (liǎng jiàn T-xù) – two T-shirts
  • 事 (sān jiàn shì) – three matters

9. 双 (shuāng) – For Pairs

Use for: Shoes, socks, chopsticks, hands

Examples:

  • 鞋 (yī shuāng xié) – one pair of shoes
  • 袜子 (liǎng shuāng wàzi) – two pairs of socks
  • 筷子 (yī shuāng kuàizi) – one pair of chopsticks

10. 把 (bǎ) – For Things with Handles

Use for: Chairs, umbrellas, knives

Examples:

  • 椅子 (yī yǐzi) – one chair
  • 伞 (liǎng sǎn) – two umbrellas
  • 刀 (sān dāo) – three knives

11. 辆 (liàng) – For Vehicles

Use for: Cars, bicycles, buses

Examples:

  • 车 (yī liàng chē) – one car
  • 自行车 (liǎng liàng zìxíngchē) – two bicycles
  • 公交车 (sān liàng gōngjiāo chē) – three buses

12. 架 (jià) – For Planes & Machines

Use for: Airplanes, pianos, cameras

Examples:

  • 飞机 (yī jià fēijī) – one airplane
  • 钢琴 (liǎng jià gāngqín) – two pianos
  • 照相机 (sān jià zhàoxiàngjī) – three cameras

13. 座 (zuò) – For Buildings & Mountains

Use for: Buildings, bridges, mountains

Examples:

  • 山 (yī zuò shān) – one mountain
  • 桥 (liǎng zuò qiáo) – two bridges
  • 房子 (sān zuò fángzi) – three houses

14. 头 (tóu) – For Large Animals

Use for: Cattle, elephants, pigs

Examples:

  • 牛 (yī tóu niú) – one cow
  • 大象 (liǎng tóu dàxiàng) – two elephants
  • 猪 (sān tóu zhū) – three pigs

15. 匹 (pǐ) – For Horses

Use for: Horses (mainly)

Examples:

  • 马 (yī mǎ) – one horse
  • 马 (liǎng mǎ) – two horses

16. 颗 (kē) – For Small, Round Things

Use for: Hearts, teeth, pearls, stars

Examples:

  • 心 (yī xīn) – one heart
  • 牙 (liǎng yá) – two teeth
  • 星星 (sān xīngxing) – three stars

17. 块 (kuài) – For Chunks/Pieces

Use for: Cake, soap, stone, land, money (yuan)

Examples:

  • 蛋糕 (yī kuài dàngāo) – one piece of cake
  • 钱 (liǎng kuài qián) – two yuan
  • 石头 (sān kuài shítou) – three stones

18. 层 (céng) – For Layers/Floors

Use for: Building floors, layers

Examples:

  • 楼 (yī céng lóu) – one floor
  • 蛋糕 (liǎng céng dàngāo) – two-layer cake

19. 口 (kǒu) – For Family Members & Wells

Use for: Family members (when counting), wells, pigs

Examples:

  • 人 (yī kǒu rén) – one family member
  • 之家 (sān kǒu zhī jiā) – family of three
  • 井 (yī kǒu jǐng) – one well

20. 位 (wèi) – For People (Polite)

Use for: People (respectful/formal)

Examples:

  • 老师 (yī wèi lǎoshī) – one teacher
  • 客人 (liǎng wèi kèrén) – two guests
  • 先生 (sān wèi xiānsheng) – three gentlemen

How to Remember Measure Words

Strategy 1: Learn by Category

Group measure words by what they describe:

  • Animals: 只 (small), 头 (large), 匹 (horses)
  • Containers: 杯 (cup), 瓶 (bottle), 碗 (bowl)
  • Vehicles: 辆 (cars), 架 (planes)
  • Buildings: 座 (buildings), 层 (floors)

Strategy 2: Focus on Shape

  • Long & thin: 条 (river, fish, pants)
  • Flat: 张 (paper, table, bed)
  • Round: 颗 (pearls, hearts)
  • Chunks: 块 (cake, soap)

Strategy 3: Create Mental Images

For example:

  • = Books with bending spines
  • = Things you can grab (handles)
  • = Things that look like a strip

Want to improve your overall vocabulary? Check out my guide on essential Chinese words for beginners.

Comparison table showing Chinese measure words categorized by shape: 条 for long items, 张 for flat items, 块 for chunks

Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Mistake #1: Forgetting the Measure Word

Wrong: 我有三书
Right: 我有三

❌ Mistake #2: Using the Wrong Measure Word

Wrong: 一个书 (should be 本 for books)
Right:

❌ Mistake #3: Confusing 只, 头, and 匹 for Animals

  • Small animals: 只 (一只猫)
  • Large animals: 头 (一头牛)
  • Horses: 匹 (一匹马)

❌ Mistake #4: Using 个 When a Specific Word Exists

While 个 often works, using the specific measure word sounds more natural:

  • Acceptable: 一个书 ✓ (but not ideal)
  • Better: 一本书 ✅

Practice Exercises

Exercise 1: Choose the Correct Measure Word

  1. 一____猫 (cat)
  2. 两____咖啡 (coffee)
  3. 三____车 (car)
  4. 一____裤子 (pants)
  5. 两____人 (people – polite)

Answers:

  1. 咖啡
  2. 裤子

Exercise 2: Translate to Chinese

  1. One book
  2. Three chairs
  3. Two bottles of water
  4. One airplane
  5. Four dogs

Answers:

  1. 一本书
  2. 三把椅子
  3. 两瓶水
  4. 一架飞机
  5. 四只狗

Quick Reference Chart

Measure WordUse ForExample
个 (gè)General items, people一个人 (one person)
本 (běn)Books, magazines一本书 (one book)
只 (zhī)Small animals一只猫 (one cat)
条 (tiáo)Long, thin things一条鱼 (one fish)
张 (zhāng)Flat things一张纸 (one paper)
杯 (bēi)Cups of liquid一杯水 (one cup of water)
辆 (liàng)Vehicles一辆车 (one car)
把 (bǎ)Things with handles一把伞 (one umbrella)
Illustrated guide showing which Chinese measure words to use for different animals: 只, 匹, and 头

What to Learn Next

Now that you understand measure words, here’s what to tackle next:

  1. Practice using measure words in full sentences
  2. Learn how to use 这/那 with measure words
  3. Study more advanced grammar patterns
  4. Focus on speaking practice to make them automatic

Remember: Don’t stress about memorizing every measure word. Start with the top 10, and you’ll already understand 80% of common usage! 🎯


🚀 Master Chinese Grammar with Personalized Lessons

Measure words are just one piece of the Chinese grammar puzzle. Want to master them through real conversations and personalized feedback?

I’m Candice, and I help students like you:

  • ✅ Use measure words naturally in conversation
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  • ✅ Practice with customized exercises
  • ✅ Build confidence speaking grammatically correct Chinese

👉 Ready to stop guessing and start speaking correctly? Explore my structured Mandarin lessons designed for learners at every level.

Want to know more about my teaching approach? Learn about my background and methodology and see how I can help you succeed.

Not sure which lesson package is right for you? Browse my flexible pricing options and find the perfect fit for your goals and budget.

Questions about measure words or my lessons? Get in touch today and let’s discuss how I can help you master Chinese grammar!

Which measure word do you find most confusing? Share in the comments below!

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