Learn how to use the particle 着 to indicate posture/manner of action and continuing states in Chinese
1 Basic 着 (zhe) Pattern
The particle 着 (zhe) is attached to verbs in Chinese to indicate either:
- The posture or manner in which an activity is carried out (e.g., lying down, kneeling, standing, wearing)
- A continuing state (e.g., waiting, holding, sleeping)
The basic pattern is simply: Verb + 着
Background Action
Main Action
Basic Pattern Examples
Key Grammar Points
The verb with 着 describes how the main action is performed:
The action with 着 is the background/simultaneous action.
The structure typically follows this order:
2 着 Indicating Posture or Manner
When 着 (zhe) is attached to verbs indicating posture or manner, it shows how an action is being carried out. These verbs typically describe physical positions or ways of doing something.
read while lying down
eat while standing
work while sitting
go out wearing a coat
read wearing glasses
walk holding a book
study while listening to music
drive while looking at a map
Posture/Manner Pattern Structure
Key Point: The verb with 着 describes the posture, manner, or background action in which the main action is performed.
Common Posture Verbs
These verbs often take 着 to indicate posture/manner:
着 (zhe) Function
The particle 着 (zhe) transforms action verbs into descriptive states:
Word Order Pattern
The typical sentence structure:
Important Note
Verbs with 着 cannot be used with time duration phrases:
3 着 Indicating a Continuing State
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4 Usage Notes and Patterns
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Practice Exercises
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