Ariel
"I'm a Chinese. "or "I'm Chinese?" which one is correct? My teacher has different idea from my book,and she always has wrong idea.╮(╯_╰)╭I hope you can help me. Thanks for helping.
2018년 3월 11일 오전 9:19
답변 · 6
2
I'm Chinese.
2018년 3월 11일
2
Hi Ariel, "I am Chinese" (I'm Chinese) is correct. When "a" is in front of the nationality, it becomes an adjective which then needs to be followed by a noun. For example: a Chinese man - a Chinese woman - a Chinese car - a Chinese person. For example in this dialogue: Ariel: Hi Alex. Where are you from? Alex: Hi Ariel, I'm from Switzerland. And you? Ariel: I'm from China. What is your nationality, Alex? Alex: I'm Swiss. I'm a Swiss man. And you? Ariel: I'm Chinese. I'm a Chinese woman. I hope this was clear and easy for you to understand. Alex
2018년 3월 11일
2
I'm Chinese. But I'm a Chinese man/woman. Pay attnetion to if Chinese is an adj or a noun.
2018년 3월 11일
1
I am from China. I am a Chinese person/man/woman. I'm Chinese. I am Chinese. Take your pick, any will serve the purpose unless I say it of course because I am not from China and I am not a Chinese person.
2018년 3월 11일
In the year 2018, the only correct answer is "I'm Chinese." The phrase "a Chinese," in which "Chinese" is not an adjective but a singular noun, is not actually wrong--but it is outdated language. Nobody's used it in fifty years. Do not use it. It is not only outdated, it is slightly disrespectful. You might read it in an old book. It's old-fashioned. It's language used when describing national stereotypes. It would be used about someone else, not yourself. With apologies for presenting an unpleasant example of stereotyping, and extra apologies to any Koreans reading this, here is some language from 1904 by the writer Jack London: "The Korean is the perfect type of inefficiency — of utter worthlessness. The Chinese is the perfect type of industry. For sheer work no worker in the world can compare with him... The Chinese is no coward," etc.
2018년 3월 11일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!