Using “了” in Negative Sentences

Introduction: Why Negative Sentences Are Tricky

Many learners struggle with negative sentences using 了.
The challenge is that “了” marks completion or change, but negative sentences often deny the action or state, so the placement and form of “了” is different.

Understanding this distinction is crucial for:

  • Talking about things you haven’t done
  • Explaining that an action did not occur
  • Avoiding mistakes that sound unnatural to native speakers

Recommended prior reading:


1. The Basic Negative: “没 + Verb”

The simplest way to negate an action is with .

Pattern:

Subject + 没 + Verb + Object

Examples:

ChineseEnglish
我没吃早饭。I didn’t eat breakfast.
他没去北京。He didn’t go to Beijing.
我没学中文三年。I haven’t studied Chinese for three years.

Note:

  • Here “了” is not needed because the negative itself indicates the action did not happen or is incomplete.

2. When to Use “了” in Negative Sentences

Sometimes negative sentences still need 了.

Case 1: Negative Completion (了 after object)

  • You want to indicate an expected completion that didn’t happen.

Pattern:

Subject + Verb + Object + 没 + 了

Examples:

ChineseEnglish
他本来想走,可是没走了。He originally wanted to leave, but didn’t.
我原本打算学习中文三年,可是没学完了。I originally planned to study Chinese for three years, but didn’t finish.

This usage is more common in spoken Chinese.


Case 2: Ongoing Negative Actions

When denying ongoing actions, use 还没 + Verb + duration.

Examples:

ChineseEnglish
我还没学中文三年。I haven’t reached three years of study yet.
他还没完成作业。He hasn’t finished his homework yet.

Key tip: 还没 emphasizes that the action is expected but not finished.


3. Negative Sentences with Duration

Negative sentences can also describe duration that hasn’t occurred.

Pattern:

Subject + 没 + Verb + Duration

Examples:

ChineseEnglish
我没学中文三年。I haven’t studied Chinese for three years.
他没在北京住五年。He didn’t live in Beijing for five years.

Tip:

  • Do not add a second “了” in these sentences — it would sound unnatural.
  • The negative already implies the action did not complete, so double 了 is unnecessary.

4. Comparison: Positive vs Negative

TypePositiveNegative
Action completed我学了中文三年了。我没学中文三年。
Action finished in past我学了三年中文。我没学三年中文。
Ongoing我学了中文三年了。我还没学中文三年。

Observing the patterns helps learners predict where to put 了 in negative sentences.


5. Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Incorrect: 我没学了中文三年。 ❌
    Correct: 我没学中文三年。 ✅
  2. Incorrect: 他没学了三年中文。 ❌
    Correct: 他没学三年中文。 ✅

Rule of thumb: In negative sentences, “没 + Verb” covers the completion, so adding 了 before the object is usually wrong.


6. Special Cases: Unexpected Outcomes

Sometimes negatives appear after a completed plan or expectation, often in spoken Chinese.

Examples:

ChineseEnglish
我以为他会来,可是没来了。I thought he would come, but he didn’t.
她打算完成作业,结果没做了。She planned to finish the homework, but didn’t.

Here, 了 marks a change of state — the plan was expected, but reality is different.


7. Dialogue Examples

Example 1

甲:你学中文多久了?
乙:我还没学中文三年。

Example 2

甲:他完成作业了吗?
乙:他没完成。

These simple conversations illustrate real-life usage and help learners internalize the rules.


8. Quick Reference Table

Negative TypePatternExample
Basic negationSubject + 没 + Verb我没吃早饭。
Ongoing actionSubject + 还没 + Verb + duration我还没学中文三年。
Expected but didn’t happenVerb + Object + 没 + 了他本来想走,可是没走了。
Special case (unexpected)Verb + Object + 没 + 了她打算完成作业,结果没做了。

9. Tips for Mastery

  1. Always check if the action was expected or completed.
  2. Use 还没 for ongoing actions that aren’t finished.
  3. Avoid double 了 in simple negatives — it sounds unnatural.
  4. Practice with dialogues — that’s how native speakers use it.

Conclusion

Negative sentences with “了” require careful attention:

  • 没 + Verb → standard negation
  • 还没 + Verb + duration → ongoing negation
  • Verb + Object + 没 + 了 → unexpected or uncompleted plan

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