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Chinese Grammar tutors, lessons & classes

我们来看看 wǒmen lái kànkan How a Chinese teacher opens the grammar segment: "Let's take a look."

Personally vetted tutors who teach Mandarin grammar as the working system it actually is: tones and measure words, the topic-comment sentence frame, the 把 ba construction, aspect particles, and the sentence-final particles that carry the speaker's stance.

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Chinese grammar tutor walking an adult student through measure words and topic-comment sentence frames — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
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18+Years in LA
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Chinese Grammar tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching languages since 2006 and we vet every teacher ourselves rather than running an open marketplace. The grammar-focused roster is curated tightly because grammar instruction rewards a tutor who can explain the system, not just present it.

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语法 yǔfǎ — the working system

5 grammar pieces every Mandarin learner has to get right

These are not advanced topics for someone preparing for HSK 6. They are the core grammar pieces that determine whether a learner sounds intermediate or sounds like they are still translating from English. Save the list and book a tutor to drill them.

  1. 01

    声调 shēngdiào — the four tones

    The single most consequential grammatical piece in Mandarin. Tones are part of each word, not accent decoration. 妈 mā (mother), 麻 má (hemp), 马 mǎ (horse), 骂 mà (scold) are four different words built on the same syllable. The tone-pair drills (sixteen two-tone combinations, plus the third-tone sandhi rule) are the systematic approach. A learner who fossilizes tone errors early spends years undoing them at the intermediate stage.

    e.g. 妈 mā (high level) vs 麻 má (rising) vs 马 mǎ (dipping) vs 骂 mà (falling): same syllable, four different words distinguished only by pitch contour

  2. 02

    量词 liàngcí — measure words

    Every Mandarin counted noun takes a measure word between the number and the noun: 一个人 (one person, generic 个), 一条鱼 (one fish, long-thin 条), 一本书 (one book, bound-volume 本), 一辆车 (one vehicle, vehicle 辆). Roughly 150 measure words in active use, chosen by the shape, category, or function of the noun. The general-purpose 个 is a beginner fallback that reads as undertrained in adult speech once a learner is past the survival stage.

    e.g. 一个人 yī ge rén (one person), 一条鱼 yī tiáo yú (one fish), 一本书 yī běn shū (one book), 一杯咖啡 yī bēi kāfēi (one cup of coffee)

  3. 03

    Topic-comment vs subject-predicate

    Mandarin frequently fronts the topic (what the sentence is about) and comments on it, where English defaults to subject-verb-object. 那本书我已经看了 ("that book I already read") is unmarked Mandarin where English would say "I already read that book." Spanish and English do this occasionally for emphasis; Mandarin does it routinely. A learner who internalizes the topic-comment frame sounds like someone who has spent time in the language.

    e.g. 那本书我已经看了。Nà běn shū wǒ yǐjīng kàn le. — Topic-fronted "That book, I've already read it," the unmarked Mandarin pattern

  4. 04

    把 ba construction

    A preposition that fronts a direct object before the verb, with a specific grammatical effect: it implies the object has been disposed of, affected, or completed in some way by the action. 我把那本书看完了 ("I took that book and finished reading it") is grammatically different from 我看完了那本书 ("I finished reading that book") in a way that does not exist in English. Required in many contexts; failing to use it produces sentences native speakers correct as ungrammatical.

    e.g. 我把门关上了。Wǒ bǎ mén guān shàng le. ("I closed the door," with the door as the affected object placed before the verb)

  5. 05

    Sentence-final particles 了 / 吗 / 呢 / 吧

    Small endings that carry the speaker's stance toward what they are saying. 了 marks completion or change of state. 吗 turns a statement into a yes-no question. 呢 raises a parallel question or marks ongoing context. 吧 softens a statement into a suggestion or seeks agreement. Grammatically perfect Mandarin without these sounds flat, and adding them is one of the largest jumps from textbook Mandarin to natural-sounding speech.

    e.g. 你吃饭了吗?(Nǐ chī fàn le ma?) "Have you eaten?" (le marks completion, ma turns it into a question); 我们走吧。(Wǒmen zǒu ba.) "Let's go." (ba softens to suggestion)

About Chinese Grammar

Mandarin grammar as a working system

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Chinese Grammar

Tone-pair drilling and tone sandhi

Lessons drill the sixteen two-tone combinations explicitly, plus the third-tone sandhi rule that turns two third tones in a row into a rising-then-dipping pair, plus the 不 bù and 一 yī tone-change rules that beginner courses tend to skip. Tone work continues at every level because fossilized tone errors in intermediate students are the most common single fix a grammar tutor applies. The Strommen blog post on basic Chinese radicals is a parallel reading companion for the character side.

Measure words taught in collocation with nouns

Measure words 量词 are paired with the nouns they go with rather than memorized as a separate list, because the right measure word for a noun is fundamentally a vocabulary-paired piece of knowledge rather than a rule. Lessons cover the high-frequency set (个 generic, 条 long-thin, 本 bound-volume, 辆 vehicle, 把 handle, 杯 cup, 张 flat-sheet) in the first months and layer in the rarer ones as vocabulary expands. Tutors call out the cases where multiple measure words are possible and the choice carries nuance.

Topic-comment, 把 construction, and aspect particles

The topic-comment sentence frame gets explicit teaching with contrastive sentences (the same content rendered as topic-comment and as subject-verb-object, with the rhythm difference made audible). The 把 construction is taught as a system rather than a rule, with practice on when it must be used, when it may not be used, and what it adds when optional. Aspect particles 了, 过, and 着 are drilled in contrastive pairs (le vs guo, le vs zhe) so the choice becomes reflexive rather than computed.

Grammar tied to a real proficiency target

Lessons connect to whatever benchmark fits your goal: HSK 1 through 6, school placement testing, a workplace credential, or simply structural fluency for conversation and reading. Tutors with HSK examination experience know exactly which grammar points appear at each level and design study plans around them. For students who want explicit conversation-focused work alongside grammar drilling, paths open toward conversational Chinese or HSK exam preparation. See also the Chinese classes page for small-group options.

FAQ

About Chinese Grammar lessons & classes

Is Chinese grammar really easier than English grammar?

Partly. Mandarin has no verb conjugations, no plurals, no gendered nouns, no articles, no tense agreement, and no case endings, which is genuinely simpler than English in those specific places. But the information English packs into morphology has to live somewhere in Mandarin, and where it lives is in tones, measure words, word order, aspect particles, and sentence-final particles. The grammar is differently shaped, not absent. Treating Mandarin grammar as small is the most common reason adult learners fossilize errors that take years to undo.

Why do my Chinese sentences sound stiff even when the grammar is right?

Usually because the sentence is built on the English subject-verb-object frame rather than the Mandarin topic-comment frame, and often because the sentence-final particles that mark the speaker's stance are missing. Grammatically correct Mandarin without 了, 吗, 呢, 吧, and 啊 sounds flat to a native speaker. A grammar-focused tutor calls out both patterns explicitly and drills the topic-fronted alternative until it becomes a natural choice rather than a translated one.

Are measure words really that important, or can I just use 个 ge for everything?

Important enough that intermediate students who skip them sound undertrained. The general-purpose 个 ge is a viable fallback for an absolute beginner, and a tutor will allow it during the survival stage. Once a learner is past month three or four, the right measure words for the high-frequency nouns (条 for fish and long-thin objects, 本 for books, 辆 for vehicles, 杯 for cups, 张 for flat sheets) become a marker of whether the learner is taking the language seriously. Lessons drill them in collocation with the nouns rather than as a separate list.

What's the 把 ba construction, and do I really have to learn it?

Yes, and most intermediate students who claim to know it actually do not. 把 ba is a preposition that fronts a direct object before the verb, with a specific grammatical effect: it implies the object has been disposed of, affected, or completed by the action. 我把那本书看完了 ("I took that book and finished reading it") is grammatically different from 我看完了那本书 ("I finished reading that book") in a way that has no English analogue. The construction is required in many contexts and the failure to use it produces sentences native speakers correct as ungrammatical.

How important are the aspect particles 了, 过, and 着?

Very. They do the work English does with tense, and beginner courses tend to teach 了 (because it cannot be avoided) and stop there. The result is intermediate students who can describe completed actions but struggle with experience ("I have been to Japan" requires 过), ongoing state (a continuous descriptive aspect different from the progressive requires 着), and the modal vs perfective uses of 了 itself. Lessons drill the three particles in contrastive pairs with example sentences where swapping the particle changes the meaning.

Do I need to learn all the sentence-final particles right away?

All four high-frequency ones, yes, and the sooner the better. 吗 turns a statement into a yes-no question (unavoidable). 呢 raises a parallel question or marks ongoing context. 吧 softens to a suggestion. 啊 carries emotional warmth. Beginner courses teach 吗 because it cannot be avoided and rarely attend to the others, which is why intermediate students often produce grammatically correct and tonally flat Mandarin. Introducing all four early and drilling them in conversation rather than in isolation is the fix.

Can I just learn grammar from a textbook and skip a tutor?

Possible but slow, and most learners who try hit a ceiling around upper-beginner. Textbooks present grammar; they do not respond to the specific errors you are making, and they do not catch the patterns you are quietly avoiding because they feel hard (the 把 construction, the topic-comment frame, the rarer measure words). A tutor closes both gaps: targeted correction on real sentences you produce, plus assigned practice on whatever you are dodging. Many of our grammar students use a textbook as a backbone and the tutor as the diagnostic and corrective layer on top.

Can I take grammar lessons online?

Yes. Most of our grammar-focused Chinese tutors teach online via Zoom or Jitsi worldwide. Several also teach in person around Los Angeles. The booking widget on each tutor profile shows their available formats and times. Grammar lessons work especially well online because the tutor can share their screen for sentence breakdowns, tone-pair drills, and 把-construction practice in real time.

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