Today I wanted to quickly go over the days of the week in Mandarin Chinese. So, if you have been following this blog, you will already know the Chinese numbering system, and this is crucial in the logical system that the Chinese use for names of their days.
Weekdays
So here goes, the first day of the Chinese week: (Monday) is called 星期一 (xīng qī yī) which is literally "star period 1". (bearing in mind months and weeks are historically based on the moons movements) or "small amount of time 1".
xīng qī yī
Monday
The following days of the week are surprisingly easy and make perfect sense following the numbers starting on Monday, through our usual week.
xīng qī èr
Tuesday
星期三
xīng qī sān
Wednesday
星期四
xīng qī sì
Thursday
星期五
xīng qī wǔ
Friday
星期六
xīng qī liù
Saturday
星期天 / 禮拜天
xīng qī tiān / lǐ bài tiān
Sunday
This sytem follows the whole way through to Sunday, where I am told, whilst 星期天 (xīng qī tiān) is the formal way to say Sunday. However 禮拜天 (lǐ bài tiān) is literally: worship day.
Common Phrases: Days
tiān
day
今天
jīn tiān
today
昨天
zuó tiān
yesterday
明天
míng tiān
tomorrow
每天
měi tiān
everyday
有天
yǒu tiān
someday
Sentences that may be useful:
nǎ yītiān shì shénme?
What day is it?
今天是星期二
jīntiān shì xīngqī'èr
Today is Tuesday
昨天是星期一
zuótiān shì xīngqīyī
Yesterday was Monday
今天我去商店
jīntiān wǒ qù shāngdiàn
Today I went to the shop
昨天我去商店
zuótiān wǒ qù shāngdiàn
Yesterday I went to the shop
每天我去商店
měitiān wǒ qù shāngdiàn
Everyday I go to the shop
星期一我会去商店
xīngqīyī wǒ huì qù shāngdiàn
Monday I will go to the shop
明天我会去商店
míngtiān wǒ huì qù shāngdiàn
Tomorrow I will go to the shop
上周五我去商店
shàng zhōuwǔ wǒ qù shāngdiàn
Last Friday I went to the shop
明天永远不会来
míngtiān yǒngyuǎn bùhuì lái
Tomorrow Never Comes
明天永远不会死的
míngtiān yǒngyuǎn bùhuì sǐ de
Tomorrow Never Dies
昨天,所有烦恼似乎已经离我远去。
zuótiān, suǒyǒu fánnǎo sìhū yǐjīng lí wǒ yuǎn qù
Yesterday, All my troubles seemed so far away
I hope this makes clear the Days in Mandarin, and some of the uses and application. I will make weeks and months one of the next few posts.
Charlie
Yesterday Lyric Translation

Having had to experiment and explore Chinese grammar today, with the help of a couple of my friends on twitter, I learnt the way to incorperate colours into sentences. First of all though lets go through a couple of the basic colours. Each colour ends with 色 sè
白色 (báisè) White
黑色 (hēisè) Black
红色 (hóngsè) Red
黄色 (huángsè) Yellow
蓝色 (lánsè) Blue
绿色 (lǜsè) Green
紫色 (zǐsè) Purple
橙色 (chéngsè) Orange
Colours are descriptive of an object and when used as a description you put the suffix 的 de following the colour. This makes it clear that you are talking about the preceeding object being that colour. If you are just saying that something generic is a colour you need not place 的 (de) at the end of the colour. But if it is in reference to something specific then 的 de is required.

zhèxiē huā shì zǐsè de
These flowers are purple.

zhè zhī xióngmāo shì hēisè hé báisè de
This panda is black and white.

Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó guóqí shì hóngsè hé huángsè de.
The Chinese* Flag is red and yellow.
Hopefully this gives you a starting grasp of colours and how they are used within Mandarin sentences. I have only just learnt this today, and am glad to share it with you.
Charlie
* 中华人民共和国 (Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó) actually means The People's Republic of China.
Photo Source
Flickr
Flickr
Flickr
Flickr
Chinese Mandarin may not have an Alphabet but its Numerical system is very logical, much more so than the English number system. Here are the first ten numbers
1 一 yī
2 二 èr
3 三 sān
4 四 sì
5 五 wǔ
6 六 iù
7 七 qī
8 八 bā
9 九 jiǔ
10 十 shí
12 十二 shí èr
13 十三 shí sān
14 十四 shí sì
15 十五 shí wǔ
16 十六 shí liù
17 十七 shí qī
18 十八 shí bā
19 十九 shí jiǔ
20 二十 èr shí
20 二十 èr shí
30 三十 sān shí
40 四十 sì shí
50 五十 wǔ shí
60 六十 liù shí
70 七十 qī shí
80 八十 bā shí
90 九十 jiǔ shí
100 百 baǐ (一百 yībaǐ)
And when saying numbers in double figures for example 42 (the answer to life, the universe and everything). As above you say four-tens two. 四十二 (sìshí èr). This works exactly the same when working into the hundreds. For example 438 is four-hundreds-three-tens-eight. 四百三十八
So lets try some now. What is the Mandarin phrase for 68? (answers at the bottom.)
91?
136?
424?
And what number are these?
三十二 ?
八十七 ?
六百十五 ?
Scroll down for your answers:

Answers:
91 is 九十一 ( jiǔ shí yī)
136 is 百三十六 (baǐ sān shí iù)
424 is 四百二十四 (sì baǐ èr shí sì)
八十七 is 87
三十二 is 32
六百十五 is 615
Charlie
Photo Source:
Flickr:Kenyee
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