s, or simply particles, are words that convey certain grammatical meanings. The term is often applied to words that are difficult to classify according to traditional grammar. Both Classical Chinese and Modern Standard Chinese make use of particles. In Chinese, particles are known as zhùcí or yǔzhùcí. They belong to function words. In other words, they have no lexical meaning, but are used to indicate certain grammatical information. This contrasts with content words. Particles in Chinese usually take the neutral tone.: p. 238
Studies by earlier authors
The first book devoted to the study of Chinese particles, 《語助》, was written by Lu Yi-Wei in the period of the Yuan Dynasty. Later important works include 《助字辨略》 by Liu Qi and 《經傳釋詞》 by Wang Yin-Zhi, both published during the Qing Dynasty. These works focus on particles in the Confucius classics. Particles used in the vernacular literature did not draw much attention. The first work covering the particles found in the vernacular literature, 《詩詞曲語辭彙釋》 by Zhang Xiang, appeared posthumously in 1953.
Linguistic sketch
Linguists often categorise Chinese particles into the following types:
Structural particle : This class of particles concern syntactic relations. The particles can be distinguished only in written form because they are usually pronounced the same.
* is used to mark adverbials. E.g.: 安靜地睡著了 'fell asleep quietly'
* is used to mark verb complements. E.g.: 學習得很認真 'study very hard'
*, according to traditional analysis, is used to mark attributive. It is often analysed as a nominaliser. E.g.: 書的封面很漂亮 ' cover of the book very beautiful'
Aspectual particle : Commonly dubbed aspect markers, the particles signal grammatical aspect. The most renowned ones are the perfective, durative, durative, and experiential.: p. 185
Modal particle : Often called sentence-final particles, the particles signal linguistic modality. Common ones include,,, and.: p. 238
Particles like and remain disputable since no satisfactory analysis is present.
Illustrations
In Classical Chinese
The function of a Chinese particle depends on its position in the sentence and on context. In many cases, the character used for a particle is a phonetic loan; therefore, the same particle could be written with different characters that share the same sound. For example, qí/jī, a common particle in classical Chinese, has, among others, various meaning as listed below. The following list provides examples of the functions of particles in Classical Chinese. Classical Chinese refers to the traditional style of written Chinese that is modelled on the Classics, such as Confucius's Analects. Thus, its usage of particles differs from that of modern varieties of Chinese.
, refers to written Chinese that is based on the vernacular language used during the period between imperial China and the early 20th century. The use of particles in vernacular Chinese differs from that of Classical Chinese, as can be seen in the following examples. Usage of particles in modern Standard Chinese is similar to that illustrated here.