3

I have read some articles Chinese, my question is about above subject, because if I want to say:

我没喝 (it is wrong)
我不喝 (it is right)

are there list of verb can be followed by 没(mei3) and 不(bu4)?

Becky 李蓓
  • 16,291
  • 9
  • 49
  • 165
Agoeng Liu
  • 445
  • 1
  • 4
  • 8

1 Answers1

3

没 and 不 are fundamentally different.

没 means "didn't"

不 means "won't" or "don't"

Actually your two sentences are perfectly normal Chinese sentences:

我没喝 means I didn't drink (it) -or- I haven't drank

我不喝 means I don't want to drink -or- I won't drink

A Chinese English Dictionary

ADVERB INFORMAL have not or did not

他来没来?——还没来呢。

Tā lái méi lái? —— hái méi lái ne.

Has he come yet?--Not yet.

1 (used before verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs; never before 有) not; won't; not want to

我不去。

Wǒ bù qù.

I'm not going. or I won't go.

他昨天不来,可是今天来了。

Tā zuótiān bù lái, kěshì jīntiān lái le.

He didn't want to come yesterday,but he came today.

So the deal is: do you want to say haven't (yet), didn't (yet) = 没 -or- won't, don't (want to) = 不. Pretty much any verb can follow 没 and 不 everything just depends on what you want to express.

有 might be the only exception I can think of at the moment but that's been covered here: Why is 有 (yǒu) the only verb that requires 没 while other verbs can use 不?

Mou某
  • 35,955
  • 9
  • 53
  • 137
  • For 有 please take a look here: http://chinese.stackexchange.com/questions/247/why-is-有-yǒu-the-only-verb-that-requires-没-while-other-verbs-can-use-不 – Mou某 Jul 11 '14 at 06:50