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Skills and Permissions

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A1 modal_verbs 5 min de leitura

Modal Verb 会 - Learned Ability

Use 会 to express 'knowing how' to do something acquired through learning and practice.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use 会 (huì) for skills learned through study or practice.
  • Structure: Subject + 会 + Verb. Example: 我会说中文。
  • Negative: Use 不会 (bú huì). The 不 changes to second tone.
  • Don't use it for permission or natural physical abilities.

Quick Reference

Type Structure Chinese Example Meaning
Affirmative Subj. + 会 + Verb 我会游泳。 I can swim.
Negative Subj. + 不会 + Verb 他不会做饭。 He can't cook.
Question (ma) Subj. + 会...吗? 你会开车吗? Can you drive?
Question (V-not-V) Subj. + 会不会 + Verb 你会不会画画? Can you paint?
Language Short Subj. + 会 + Lang. 我会法语。 I know French.
Refinement Subj. + 很会 + Verb 她很会跳舞。 She's good at dancing.

Exemplos-chave

3 de 8
1

我会写汉字

I can write Chinese characters.

2

我妈妈会说英语

My mom can speak English.

3

会中文吗?

Do you know Chinese?

💡

The Resume Rule

If you'd put it on your CV or LinkedIn, use `会`. It’s for things that required a teacher, a book, or a lot of sweat.

⚠️

Tone Alert!

Remember that `不` (bù) changes to `bú` before `会`. It’s a mandatory 'tone sandhi'. Saying 'bù huì' sounds like a robot with a glitch.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use 会 (huì) for skills learned through study or practice.
  • Structure: Subject + 会 + Verb. Example: 我会说中文。
  • Negative: Use 不会 (bú huì). The 不 changes to second tone.
  • Don't use it for permission or natural physical abilities.

Overview

Ever wanted to brag about your secret talents? Or maybe you just need to tell someone you can speak a bit of Chinese? Meet (huì). This is one of the most useful words you will learn. In English, we often use the word "can" for everything. In Chinese, we are a bit more specific. We use to talk about skills you have acquired. If you had to study it, practice it, or learn it from someone, you need . It is the "learned ability" verb. Think of it as your resume builder. If it is a skill you can put on a CV, is your best friend. It covers everything from speaking French to coding or even driving a car. It does not cover natural things like breathing or seeing. It is all about the effort you put in to learn.

How This Grammar Works

Using is surprisingly simple. You do not need to change the word for different people. Unlike English verbs, Chinese verbs stay the same. You just place right before the action verb. It acts like a helper. It tells the listener that the following action is a skill. For example, if you say 我吃 (wǒ chī), you are saying "I eat." If you say 我会吃 (wǒ huì chī), you are saying "I know how to eat." Use this carefully though! Saying you "know how to eat" might make people wonder if you just discovered food. Usually, we use it for complex things. Use it for 写汉字 (xiě hànzì) which means "write Chinese characters." You place it after the person and before the skill. It is like a bridge between you and your talent.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1For positive statements: Subject + + Verb + Object.
  2. 2Example: 我会做饭。 (Wǒ huì zuòfàn.) - "I can cook."
  3. 3For negative statements: Subject + 不会 + Verb + Object.
  4. 4Example: 我不会开车。 (Wǒ búhuì kāichē.) - "I can't drive."
  5. 5Note: The (bù) changes to a second tone before .
  6. 6For basic questions: Subject + + Verb + Object + ?
  7. 7Example: 你会说英文吗? (Nǐ huì shuō Yīngwén ma?) - "Can you speak English?"
  8. 8For "Yes/No" style questions: Subject + 会不会 + Verb + Object?
  9. 9Example: 你会不会游泳? (Nǐ huì bú huì yóuyǒng?) - "Can you swim or not?"

When To Use It

Use when you want to talk about a skill that took time to master.

  • Languages: 我会说汉语。 (Wǒ huì shuō Hànyǔ.)
  • Physical Skills: 他会打篮球。 (Tā huì dǎ lánqiú.)
  • Work Skills: 她会电脑。 (Tā huì diànnǎo.)
  • Artistic Skills: 我会弹钢琴。 (Wǒ huì tán gāngqín.)

Imagine you are in a job interview. The boss asks if you can use Photoshop. You would answer with . It shows you have the training. If you are at a party and someone asks if you can play guitar, use . It implies you didn't just wake up knowing how to do it. You put in the hours. You practiced. Now, you have the ability. Even simple things like using chopsticks count. If you had to learn it as a kid, is the right choice.

When Not To Use It

Do not use for things that happen naturally. You don't "learn" to see or hear. So, you wouldn't say 我会听 to mean you have ears. Also, avoid using for situational permission. If you want to ask "Can I go to the bathroom?", is wrong. That sounds like you are asking if you have the mental skill to use a toilet. Use 可以 (kěyǐ) for permission instead. Another trap is physical possibility. If your leg is broken, you "cannot" walk. But you still "know how" to walk. In that case, you wouldn't use 不会. You would use 不能 (bùnéng). is about the knowledge in your brain and the muscle memory in your body. It is not about whether you are allowed to do something right now.

Common Mistakes

One big mistake is adding (shì) before . Beginners often say 我是会说中文. This is incorrect. You don't need "to be" here. Just say 我会说中文. Another classic error is the tone of . When you say "cannot," the is usually 4th tone. But before (also 4th tone), it must switch to 2nd tone: bú huì. It sounds much smoother this way. Also, don't forget the main verb. While you can sometimes skip it for languages (like 我会中文), for most skills, you need the action. Saying 我会饭 sounds like you are saying "I am a rice expert." You should say 我会做饭 (I can cook food). Lastly, don't use it for things that are happening right this second by chance. It is for a permanent or semi-permanent skill you possess.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

In Chinese, there are three main ways to say "can": , , and 可以.

  • (huì) is for learned skills. You went to school or practiced for this.
  • (néng) is for physical ability or capacity. "I can lift this box" or "I can run 5 miles."
  • 可以 (kěyǐ) is for permission. "Can I come in?" or "May I use this?"

Think of it this way: You (know how to) drive a car. But if you drank too much wine, you 不能 (are not physically able/safe) to drive. And if you don't have a license, you 不可以 (are not permitted) to drive. It's like a grammar traffic light. Green is your skill (), yellow is your physical state (), and red is the law (可以).

Quick FAQ

Q. Can I use for things I am learning right now?

A. Yes! If you are in the process, you can still say 我会一点儿 (I know a little).

Q. Does ever mean "will"?

A. Yes, in a different context, it indicates something will happen. But at the A1 level, focus on skills first!

Q. Is 我会英语 correct without the word "speak"?

A. Yes! For languages, it is very common to drop (speak). It sounds very natural.

Q. How do I ask "How well can you...?"

A. You usually use a different structure for that, but starts the conversation.

Reference Table

Type Structure Chinese Example Meaning
Affirmative Subj. + 会 + Verb 我会游泳。 I can swim.
Negative Subj. + 不会 + Verb 他不会做饭。 He can't cook.
Question (ma) Subj. + 会...吗? 你会开车吗? Can you drive?
Question (V-not-V) Subj. + 会不会 + Verb 你会不会画画? Can you paint?
Language Short Subj. + 会 + Lang. 我会法语。 I know French.
Refinement Subj. + 很会 + Verb 她很会跳舞。 She's good at dancing.
💡

The Resume Rule

If you'd put it on your CV or LinkedIn, use `会`. It’s for things that required a teacher, a book, or a lot of sweat.

⚠️

Tone Alert!

Remember that `不` (bù) changes to `bú` before `会`. It’s a mandatory 'tone sandhi'. Saying 'bù huì' sounds like a robot with a glitch.

🎯

Shortcuts for Languages

You can skip the verb `说` (speak) for languages. `我会德语` is perfectly natural and makes you sound like a local.

💬

Modesty is Key

In Chinese culture, even if you are an expert, people often say `我会一点点` (I know a little) to stay humble. Don't be surprised!

Exemplos

8
#1 Basic Skill

我会写汉字

Focus: 写汉字

I can write Chinese characters.

Writing characters is a learned skill.

#2 Language

我妈妈会说英语

Focus: 会说英语

My mom can speak English.

Common use for language proficiency.

#3 Edge Case (Shortened)

会中文吗?

Focus: 会中文

Do you know Chinese?

With languages, you can omit the verb 'to speak'.

#4 Edge Case (Degree)

我老师很会做菜。

Focus: 很会

My teacher is very good at cooking.

Adding '很' (hěn) means someone is skilled/good at it.

#5 Formal/Work

他会这个软件。

Focus:

He can use this software.

Professional skills always use '会'.

#6 Mistake Corrected

✗ 我是会开车。 → ✓ 我会开车。

Focus: 会开车

I can drive.

Do not add 'shì' (to be) before 'huì'.

#7 Mistake Corrected

✗ 我不会走。 → ✓ 我不能走。

Focus: 不能

I can't walk (due to injury).

'Bú huì' means you never learned how; 'bù néng' means physical inability.

#8 Advanced (A2 Intro)

明天会不会下雨?

Focus: 会不会

Will it rain tomorrow?

Here 'huì' indicates a future possibility, not a skill.

Teste-se

Choose the correct word for a learned skill.

我的朋友___说五种语言。

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: a

Speaking languages is a learned skill, so we use '会'.

Complete the negative sentence.

我不___下棋。

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: b

The full negative is '不会'. Since '不' is already there, we just add '会'.

Ask someone if they know how to swim.

你会不会___?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: b

When using the '会不会' pattern, you don't add '吗' at the end.

🎉 Pontuação: /3

Recursos visuais

会 vs. 能 vs. 可以

会 (Skill)
我会做饭 I know how to cook.
能 (Ability)
我能吃十个饺子 I can eat 10 dumplings.
可以 (Permission)
我可以进来吗? May I come in?

Deciding to use '会'

1

Is this an action or skill?

YES ↓
NO
Don't use 会.
2

Did you have to learn/practice it?

YES ↓
NO
Use 能 for natural things.
3

Are you asking for permission?

YES ↓
NO
Use 会!
4

Use 可以 instead.

NO
Use 可以 instead.

Learned vs. Natural

🎓

Use 会 (Learned)

  • Playing Piano
  • Speaking Spanish
  • Coding Python
  • Driving
🌿

Use 能 (Natural/Situational)

  • Seeing/Hearing
  • Lifting heavy things
  • Walking (innate)
  • Running fast

Perguntas frequentes

21 perguntas

Sort of, but only for skills. For knowing a fact or person, use 知道 or 认识.

No, that's a request/permission. Use 可以 for ordering or asking for things.

Use 不会 (bú huì). For example: 我不会打网球 (I can't play tennis).

Sure, if you're having a mid-study crisis! But usually, you'd use it to ask others: 你会中文吗?.

is for mental/physical skills you learned. is for physical capacity or being able to do something in the moment.

Yes, if you're talking about the skill of reading a language, like 我会看汉字 (I can read characters).

Yes, it can mean 'will' (future possibility) or 'meeting'. But at the A1 level, think of it as 'know how to'.

The at the end means 'now'. So 我会了 means 'I've learned it' or 'I get it now!'.

Actually, since walking is a milestone we learn, parents might say 宝宝会走了 (The baby can walk now).

Only if you want to say 'very good at'. 他很会写字 means he is very skilled at writing.

Yes, 我想会说中文 means 'I want to be able to speak Chinese'.

Not at all! It's just a statement of fact. 我不会跳舞 is a standard way to decline a dance.

You say 谁会说英语? (Shéi huì shuō Yīngyǔ?).

Yes! 这只狗会跳 (This dog can jump/knows how to jump) is common for pet tricks.

You can say 我不记得怎么... but often people just say 我现在不会了 (I don't know how anymore).

Yes, 你会做红烧肉吗? (Do you know how to make braised pork?) is a great question for a foodie.

No, but it's used constantly in job descriptions to list required skills.

Yes, always. 我会弹吉他 (I can play guitar) or 我会拉小提琴 (I can play violin).

Nope! Chinese verbs are awesome like that. It is always regardless of the person.

No, you'd say 我不能说 (I can't speak/am unable) because you still have the skill, just not the physical health right now.

Make a list of 5 things you learned to do this year and say them out loud using 我会...!

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