着 (zháo) vs 着 (zhe): resultative complement vs durative aspect particle
The character 着 has two distinct uses with different pronunciations and meanings. '着 (zháo)' acts as a resultative complement, indicating the successful completion or attainment of an action (e.g., 找着 'found', 睡着 'fell asleep'). '着 (zhe)' is a durative aspect particle, marking an ongoing action or a continuing state (e.g., 看着 'watching', 开着 'open'). Choosing the right one depends on whether you want to express a achieved result or a continuous situation.
着 is one of the most versatile characters in Mandarin, but its two main roles are often confused. When pronounced zháo, it functions as a resultative complement attached to verbs like 找 'seek', 睡 'sleep', or 点 'light', indicating that the action succeeded in producing a result. When pronounced zhe (neutral tone), it is an aspect particle that follows a verb to show that an action is in progress or that a state continues. The key distinction is result vs. continuance: zháo answers 'did it work?', while zhe answers 'what's happening now?' or 'what state is it in?'.
When to use each
Use zháo as a resultative complement after verbs to express that an action has successfully achieved its intended outcome. Common verbs include 找 (to find → 找着 'found'), 睡 (to sleep → 睡着 'fell asleep'), and 点 (to light → 点着 'ignited'). It often pairs with the perfective particle 了 to mark completion.
zháo implies physical or metaphorical contact, attainment, or ignition. It is not a general-purpose success marker; for example, with 买 'buy', the standard success complement is 到 (买到), not 着 (买着 is nonstandard).
Use zhe after verbs to indicate an ongoing action or a resultant state that persists. It is common with stative verbs (e.g., 开着 'be open', 穿着 'be wearing') and with action verbs when describing a background activity (e.g., 看着电视 'watching TV'). Zhe is also used in the pattern 'V着V着' for actions in progress while another occurs.
zhe does not emphasize the progressive nature like 在 does; it rather describes a continuous or durative situation. For example, 门开着 means the door is in an open state, not necessarily that someone is opening it. When negated, zhe is usually dropped: 门没开 (the door isn't open).
At a glance
| 着 | 着 | |
|---|---|---|
| Function | Resultative complement (marks success/attainment) | Aspect particle (marks ongoing action or state) |
| Pronunciation | zháo (second tone) | zhe (neutral tone) |
| Meaning portrayed | Achievement: a goal is reached or a state changes | Continuation: an action or state is in progress |
| Typical verbs | 找, 睡, 点, 想 (think → 想着? '想起' more common; actually 想着 can be zháo) | 看, 开, 穿, 等, 坐 |
| Relation to 了 | Often used with 了 to mark completion (找着了) | Seldom directly with 了; ongoing aspect contradicts perfective |
Examples
- 着我找着钥匙了。Wǒ zhǎozháo yàoshi le.I found the keys.zháo indicates successful finding.
- 着他已经睡着了。Tā yǐjīng shuìzháo le.He has already fallen asleep.睡着 (shuìzháo) means 'fell asleep', not 'is sleeping'.
- 着火点着了。Huǒ diǎnzháo le.The fire is lit.点着 (diǎnzháo) marks ignition.
- 着他正在看着电视。Tā zhèngzài kànzhe diànshì.He is watching TV.看着 (kànzhe) indicates an ongoing action.
- 着门开着。Mén kāizhe.The door is open.开着 describes a resultant state.
- 着她穿着一条红裙子。Tā chuānzhe yī tiáo hóng qúnzi.She is wearing a red skirt.穿着 shows the state of wearing.
Common mistakes
- Using 着 (zhe) with 睡 to mean 'fall asleep' – say 睡着 (shuìzháo) instead.
- Using 着 (zháo) with 看 to mean 'watching' – say 看着 (kànzhe) for continuous action.
- Pronouncing 着 as zháo when it should be the neutral tone zhe (e.g., 看着 TV should be kànzhe, not kànzháo).
- Trying to use 着 (zháo) with 买 to mean 'succeeded in buying' – standard Mandarin requires 买到 (mǎidào).
- Confusing 看着 (kànzhe, watching) with 看着 (kànzhe as in '看起来' which uses 起来, not 着).
FAQ
- When do I use 着 (zháo) vs 着 (zhe)?
- Use zháo after verbs to express that you succeeded in doing something (e.g., 找着 'found', 睡着 'fell asleep'). Use zhe after verbs to express an ongoing action or a continuing state (e.g., 看着 'watching', 开着 'being open').
- How do I know which pronunciation to use when I see 着?
- Check context: if the sentence describes achieving a result (often with 了), it's zháo. If it describes a state or ongoing action, it's zhe. Listen to tone: zháo is second tone, while zhe is neutral.
- Can 着 (zhe) be used with all verbs?
- No. Zhe works best with stative verbs (开, 穿, 坐) and action verbs describing a background action. Highly punctual verbs (like 死 'die') rarely take zhe unless used metaphorically.
- Is '买着' correct Mandarin for 'bought'?
- No, '买着' is not standard. To say 'succeeded in buying' use 买到 (mǎidào). '买着' might appear in some dialects but is not accepted in standard Chinese.