A1 Expression Neutro 2 min de leitura

你好吗?

How are you?

Literalmente: You good (question particle)?

Use it to genuinely check on someone's well-being after a period of absence.

Em 15 segundos

  • The standard way to ask 'How are you?' in Chinese.
  • Best for friends or colleagues you haven't seen lately.
  • More personal and sincere than a simple 'Hello'.
  • Expect a real answer, not just a polite nod.

Significado

This is the classic way to ask 'How are you?' in Chinese. It is a friendly way to check in on someone you haven't seen in a while.

Exemplos-chave

3 de 6
1

Meeting an old classmate

好久不见,你好吗?

Long time no see, how are you?

🤝
2

Writing a polite email to a client

王先生,最近你好吗?

Mr. Wang, how have you been lately?

💼
3

Checking on a friend who was sick

听说你感冒了,现在你好吗?

I heard you had a cold, how are you now?

💭
🌍

Contexto cultural

While it's the first phrase taught to beginners, native speakers actually use it less frequently than Westerners use 'How are you?'. It often implies a deeper level of concern or a longer gap since the last meeting. In many social circles, asking about food or recent activities is a more common way to show care.

💬

The 'Food' Greeting

If someone asks `你吃了吗?` (Have you eaten?), they aren't necessarily inviting you to dinner. It's just a more common way to say 'How are you?' in daily life!

⚠️

Avoid Overuse

Don't say this to the same person every hour. It sounds like you're worried something is wrong with them!

Em 15 segundos

  • The standard way to ask 'How are you?' in Chinese.
  • Best for friends or colleagues you haven't seen lately.
  • More personal and sincere than a simple 'Hello'.
  • Expect a real answer, not just a polite nod.

What It Means

你好吗 is the textbook way to say 'How are you?'. It combines (you), (good), and (a question marker). It literally asks if you are currently in a state of being 'good'.

How To Use It

Use it when you want to genuinely check on someone's well-being. It is a complete sentence on its own. You can say it after a greeting like 你好. It feels a bit more serious than a quick 'Hi'. Think of it as a 'How have you been?' rather than a 'What's up?'.

When To Use It

Use it when meeting an old friend you haven't seen for weeks. It works well in emails to show you care about the recipient. It is great for catching up over coffee. Use it when someone looks a bit tired or down. It shows you are paying attention to their feelings.

When NOT To Use It

Don't use it as a passing greeting to a stranger. It is too personal for the guy at the convenience store. Avoid using it every single day with your roommate. It might make them think you're expecting a long life update. In China, people often ask 'Have you eaten?' instead of this. If you use it too much, you might sound like a robot from a 1990s textbook.

Cultural Background

In the West, 'How are you?' is often just a polite noise. In China, 你好吗 is a real question. It implies you actually want to know how the person is doing. Traditionally, Chinese culture focuses on actions rather than abstract feelings. This is why 'Have you eaten?' (你吃了吗) is more common for daily small talk. 你好吗 became more popular through Western influence and media. It carries a slightly more emotional or formal weight than you might expect.

Common Variations

If you want to sound more natural, try 最近怎么样 (How's it been lately?). For a very formal version, use 您好吗. If you are talking to a group, say 你们好吗. To answer, most people just say 我很好 (I'm very good). You can also say 还可以 if you're just feeling 'okay'.

Notas de uso

This phrase is neutral in formality. It is safe for almost any situation but can feel slightly 'textbook' or stiff if used as a daily greeting with close friends.

💬

The 'Food' Greeting

If someone asks `你吃了吗?` (Have you eaten?), they aren't necessarily inviting you to dinner. It's just a more common way to say 'How are you?' in daily life!

⚠️

Avoid Overuse

Don't say this to the same person every hour. It sounds like you're worried something is wrong with them!

💡

The Standard Reply

When asked this, the most common reply is `我很好,谢谢` (I'm very good, thanks). Even if you're just okay, this is the polite go-to.

Exemplos

6
#1 Meeting an old classmate
🤝

好久不见,你好吗?

Long time no see, how are you?

A classic combination for reconnecting.

#2 Writing a polite email to a client
💼

王先生,最近你好吗?

Mr. Wang, how have you been lately?

Adds a personal touch to professional correspondence.

#3 Checking on a friend who was sick
💭

听说你感冒了,现在你好吗?

I heard you had a cold, how are you now?

Shows genuine concern for their health.

#4 Texting a friend after a busy week
😊

最近很忙,你好吗?

It's been busy lately, how are you?

Short and sweet for digital messaging.

#5 A teacher addressing the class
👔

同学们好,你们好吗?

Hello students, how are you all?

Using the plural 'you' (nǐmen) for a group.

#6 Joking with a friend who looks messy
😄

你的头发怎么了?你好吗?

What happened to your hair? Are you okay?

Using the phrase to tease someone's appearance.

Teste-se

Choose the correct particle to turn 'You are good' into 'How are you?'

你好___?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa:

The particle `吗` is used at the end of a statement to turn it into a yes/no question.

How would you ask a group of people how they are?

___好吗?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: 你们

`你们` is the plural form of 'you', used when addressing more than one person.

🎉 Pontuação: /2

Recursos visuais

Formality Scale of Well-being Checks

Very Informal

Used with close friends.

怎么样? (How's it going?)

Neutral

Standard, safe for most people.

你好吗? (How are you?)

Formal

Respectful, used for elders/bosses.

您好吗? (How are you? - respectful)

When to use 你好吗?

你好吗?

Reconnecting

Old friend at a cafe

📧

Emailing

Opening a letter

❤️

Caring

Friend is sad

🏫

Classroom

Teacher to students

Perguntas frequentes

10 perguntas

Not exactly. In English, 'How are you' is often a throwaway greeting. In Chinese, 你好吗 is a genuine inquiry about someone's state.

Yes, but it is better to use the respectful form 您好吗 (Nín hǎo ma) to show proper status recognition.

You can say 不太好 (bú tài hǎo), which means 'not too good'. It usually prompts the other person to ask what's wrong.

你好 is just 'Hello', while 你好吗 is the question 'How are you?'. You usually say the first one before the second one.

Yes, it's common in texts, though younger people often use 在干嘛? (What are you doing?) to start a conversation.

Yes, it's a bit too intimate for a stranger. Stick to a simple 你好 (Hello) for people you don't know.

Yes, it is understood and used throughout the Chinese-speaking world, including Taiwan and Singapore.

It works, but 你没事吧? (Nǐ méi shì ba? - Are you alright?) is much more common in emergency or accidental situations.

It's grammatically simple and introduces the question particle . It's a foundational building block for the language.

It's like a verbal question mark. It doesn't have a meaning of its own, but it signals that the sentence is a question.

Frases relacionadas

最近怎么样?

How have you been lately?

你吃了吗?

Have you eaten? (Common greeting)

还可以

Just okay / Not bad.

好久不见

Long time no see.

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