HSK 1 Vocabulary (Part 5)
We have past halfway of HSK 1 vocabulary. Keep up your good work! After this part, but one left. Before we move on to HSK 1 Vocabulary (Part 5), in case you still need the links for part 1 to part 4,
In this HSK 1 Vocabulary (Part 5) infographic, we’ve included ~20 HSK 1 vocabulary, organized into 2 groups.
Group One: Adverb and Adjective Vocabulary
The first group is “adverbs” and “adjectives,” which include
不 bù no,
很 hěn quite/very,
太 tài too,
都 dōu all/both,
没 méi no,
大 dà big,
小 xiǎo small,
多 duō many/much,
少 shǎo few, little,
冷 lěng cold,
热 rè hot,
好 hǎo good,
漂亮 piàoliang beautiful and
高兴 gāoxìng happy.
Group Two: Measurement Words Vocabulary
The second group is the “measurement words,” which include
个 gè/ge one/a/ an,
岁 suì year (old),
块 kuài piece,
些 xiē some and
本 běn volume.
We also have an incredible HSK 1 grammar course. There are 40 grammar points included (34 infographics and 34 videos in the course), HSK 1 grammar quizzes and answer sheets, and HSK 1 & 2 Worksheets. Come visit our shop to find more detail.
HSK 1 Vocabulary Part 5 Infographic
HSK 1 Grammar Videos
As we mentioned earlier, we made a HSK 1 grammar course. If you would like to know more about how we teach grammar, here are some videos for you!
If you enjoyed the video and would like to gain access to the entire library at full resolution for the project, there are 40 grammar points included (34 infographics and 34 videos in the course). Come visit our shop to find more detail.
HSK 1 Infographic Series
HSK 1 Vocabulary Quiz Series
Chinese Numbers Sudoku Puzzles
After studying HSK 1 vocabulary, want to make sure you have mastered numbers in Chinese 1-10? We have 5 Chinese Numbers Sudoku Puzzles with the answer sheets!
Haseen Madani
I am very happy to have the information. it is very helpful to remember vocabulary.
carol mellon
what is “dianr” how is it pronounced and used? what is “yi dianr” is it always got the “r” suffix on it? please clear these up for me, thank you
Karen
Hi Carol,
diǎnr: its pronunciation is “diǎn ér” and says them together a bit faster.
yì diǎnr: its pronunciation is “yì diǎn ér” and same as the one above, says “diǎn ér” together and faster so it will sound like “dianr”.
You don’t have to say “er” tho. Actually, the people in Taiwan don’t really say “er” sound in those situations. They just simply say “diǎn” and “yì diǎn.”