Learn how to form passive sentences in Chinese using the 被 (bèi) structure to emphasize what happened to someone or something
1 Introduction to 被 Sentences
The 被 sentence is the primary way to express passive voice in Chinese. It emphasizes what happened to someone or something rather than who performed the action.
In English, passive voice is formed with “to be + past participle” (e.g., “was cheated”). In Chinese, the passive is formed by placing the Receiver of the action at the beginning, followed by 被 + the Doer of the action.
Active to Passive Transformation
transform
Key Difference: The passive voice with 被 emphasizes the receiver’s experience rather than the doer’s action.
Key Characteristics of 被 Sentences
The verb is always followed by 了 or some other complement:
This indicates the action is completed.
被 sentences shift emphasis from the doer to the receiver:
2 Basic Structure and Examples
The basic structure of a 被 sentence follows the pattern: Receiver + 被 + Doer + Verb + 了/Complement. This structure clearly shows who received the action, who performed it, and what action was performed.
Note that 都 (dōu) can be added before 被 to emphasize “all” or “completely,” as shown in the examples.
Basic 被 Sentence Examples
The Receiver
The Receiver is the entity that undergoes the action:
被 (bèi) Function
被 is the passive marker meaning “by”:
The Doer
The Doer is the entity that performs the action:
Verb + 了/Complement
The verb must be followed by additional elements:
3 Special Cases and Variations
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4 Usage Notes and Practice
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