Table of Contents

jǐ ge: 几个 - A Few, Several, How Many

Quick Summary

Core Meaning

Character Breakdown

Cultural Context and Significance

While 几个 (jǐ ge) is a simple grammatical term, its structure reveals a core aspect of the Chinese worldview: categorization. The mandatory use of measure words like 个 (ge) requires the speaker to classify the noun they are counting. In English, we say “how many people?” The word “people” is directly countable. In Chinese, you say “你家有 人?” (Nǐ jiā yǒu jǐ kǒu rén? - How many mouths of people in your family?) or, more generally, “ 人?” (jǐ ge rén? - How many individual people?). The measure word (口 or 个) is not optional. This isn't just a grammatical quirk; it reflects a language that is highly specific about the nature of objects. For a beginner, 个 (ge) is a lifesaver because it's the general, all-purpose measure word. Using 几个 (jǐ ge) correctly is the first step to understanding this fundamental “counting culture” in the Chinese language, where everything has its own specific unit or counter.

Practical Usage in Modern China

This term is extremely common in daily, informal conversation. Its usage is split into two main functions:

As a Question ("How Many?")

When used in a question, your voice will naturally have a rising intonation at the end of the sentence. You use it when you expect the answer to be a small number, typically less than 10.

As a Statement ("A Few / Several")

When used in a statement, your voice has a normal, declarative intonation. It provides a deliberately vague, small quantity. It's the equivalent of saying “a couple,” “a few,” or “several.”

The distinction is almost always clear from the context and the presence (or absence) of a question mark (?) in writing.

Example Sentences

Nuances and Common Mistakes

The most significant pitfall for learners is confusing 几个 (jǐ ge) with 多少 (duōshao). They both can mean “how many,” but they are not interchangeable.