件 vs 张 (jiàn vs zhāng): which classifier to use for clothing and flat objects
件 (jiàn) and 张 (zhāng) are common Chinese classifiers that are often confused. 件 is used for items of clothing and abstract matters/affairs, while 张 is used for flat, sheet-like objects such as paper, tickets, and tables. The key is whether the object is an item of clothing or an affair (件) or a flat, spread-out surface (张).
件 (jiàn) and 张 (zhāng) are two common Chinese classifiers (measure words) that learners often mix up. The distinction is based on the nature of the noun: 件 categorizes items of clothing (e.g., shirts, jackets) and abstract matters/affairs (e.g., events, cases), while 张 categorizes objects that are flat, thin, and sheet-like (e.g., paper, tickets, tables, photos). The choice depends on the physical shape or conceptual category of the noun.
When to use each
Use 件 for individual items of clothing (e.g., shirts, skirts, suits) and for abstract nouns denoting matters, affairs, or cases (e.g., 事情 'matter', 案件 'case'). It can also be used for some other countable items like pieces of luggage (e.g., 行李 can take 件).
When used for abstract matters, 件 often indicates a discrete incident or issue; it is not used with continuous concepts like ideas or emotions.
Use 张 for objects that have a flat, spread-out surface, such as paper, tickets, photos, tables, bedsheets, and maps. The core idea is that the object can be seen as a flat sheet or plane.
Some objects like tables are three-dimensional but have a primary flat surface (the top), so 张 is appropriate. However, not all flat objects use 张 — for example, mirrors often take 面 (miàn) and paintings take 幅 (fú).
At a glance
| 件 | 张 | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical nouns | 衣服, 衬衫, 事情, 案件 | 纸, 票, 桌子, 照片 |
| Shape/category | Clothing items (3D) or abstract affairs | Flat, sheet-like objects |
| Abstract usage | Yes (e.g., 一件事) | No (only concrete objects) |
Examples
- 件我买了一件衬衫。Wǒ mǎi le yī jiàn chènshān.I bought a shirt.Clothing item: use 件, not 张.
- 件这件事很重要。Zhè jiàn shì hěn zhòngyào.This matter is very important.Abstract affair: use 件.
- 张请给我一张纸。Qǐng gěi wǒ yī zhāng zhǐ.Please give me a piece of paper.Flat object: use 张.
- 张他买了两张票。Tā mǎi le liǎng zhāng piào.He bought two tickets.Tickets are flat: use 张.
- 张教室里有三张桌子。Jiàoshì lǐ yǒu sān zhāng zhuōzi.There are three tables in the classroom.Tables have a flat surface: use 张.
- 件她把一件衣服放在桌子上。Tā bǎ yī jiàn yīfu fàng zài zhuōzi shàng.She put a piece of clothing on the table.Contrast: 衣服 uses 件, 桌子 uses 张.
Common mistakes
- Using 张 for clothing: ✗ 一张衣服 → use 一件衣服.
- Using 件 for flat objects like paper: ✗ 一件纸 → use 一张纸.
- Using 件 for tickets: ✗ 一件票 → use 一张票.
- Using 张 for abstract matters: ✗ 一张事情 → use 一件事.
- Confusing 张 with other flat-object classifiers like 面 (for mirrors) or 幅 (for paintings).
FAQ
- When do I use 件 vs 张 for objects?
- Use 件 for clothing items (e.g., 衬衫, 裙子) and abstract matters/affairs (e.g., 事情, 案件). Use 张 for flat, sheet-like objects such as paper, tickets, photos, and tables.
- Can 张 be used for all flat objects?
- No, some flat objects have dedicated classifiers. For instance, mirrors take 面 (miàn), paintings and maps often take 幅 (fú), and windows take 扇 (shàn). However, for common items like paper and tables, 张 is standard.
- What about abstract nouns like 'idea' or 'plan'? Can I use 件?
- 件 is used for discrete matters or cases (e.g., 一件事 'one matter', 一个案子 'one case'). For ideas (想法) or plans (计划), the general classifier 个 is more common, though 件 may occasionally be used for 'item on an agenda'. Stick with 个 for broad abstract concepts.
- Is '一件行李' correct?
- Yes, 行李 (luggage) is often counted with 件, as luggage consists of individual items like suitcases and bags. This follows the 'item' meaning of 件 rather than the clothing/affair categories.