Measure word
A small word Mandarin requires between a number and a noun. English has them too — 'two slices of bread' — but Mandarin uses them everywhere.
In Mandarin, a number cannot directly modify a noun. You don’t say “one book” — you say 一本书 (yì běn shū), literally “one [volume] book”. That little word in the middle is a measure word (量词, liàngcí).
Different categories of nouns take different measure words:
- 个 (gè) — the all-purpose default, for people and many objects
- 本 (běn) — for books and bound volumes
- 张 (zhāng) — for flat things (paper, tickets, tables)
- 只 (zhī) — for animals and one-of-a-pair items
- 杯 (bēi) — for cups of liquid
Mandarin has dozens of measure words and learners absorb them gradually. The good news: 个 is acceptable in casual speech for most things, so a learner can be understood while building up the vocabulary.
Bookverse pairs every new noun with the measure word it normally takes, so you learn the pattern, not just the word.