One of the first verbs we learn in Chinese is 去, “to go”
This covers a great many everyday situations, such as “I’m going to Beijing”, “I went to eat lunch” etc. etc. But how about when the focus is more on the departure itself? This post covers the differences between the Chinese words 去, 走, 离开, 出发 and 出国, all of which can be used when you’re taking leave of one sort or another, from exiting a room to leaving the country. Online mandarin learning with Lingo Bus. Lingo Bus' general manager Haifeng hosted the Chinese Culture Corner and had a workshop with fellow VIPKid teachers, did you have a chance to stop by 😉 ? Professional Online Chinese courses for kids. Learn these and you’ll really be going places with your Chinese (pun intended. sorry…) From Financial Tribune 去 / qù As the below examples show, with the verb 去 (to go) you can specify a noun or another verb afterward, to explain where you’ll be going or what you’ll be doing when you go. Example sentences: Míngtiān wǒ huì qù guǎngzhōu 明天我...