了 vs 吗 (le vs ma): final particles for change-of-state and yes/no questions
The particle 了 (le) marks a change of state or completed action, while 吗 (ma) turns a statement into a yes/no question. When combined as 了吗, the question asks whether a change has occurred (e.g., 'Have you done something yet?'). Distinguish this from plain 吗, which simply asks about a current state or fact without implying a change.
The particle 了 (le) indicates a new situation or completion of an action, while 吗 (ma) forms yes/no questions. When combined as 了吗, the question asks if a change has occurred (e.g., 'Have you eaten yet?'). In contrast, using plain 吗 with a verb asks about a current state or fact without focusing on change (e.g., 'Do you eat?'). The choice depends on whether the speaker expects a change of state.
When to use each
Use 了 to indicate a new situation, a completed action, or a change from a previous state. It is not a question particle but can appear in questions when combined with 吗 to ask about a change. Alone, it often ends statements about completed actions or changes.
In questions, 了 alone (e.g., 你吃了?) can imply a change-of-state question without 吗, but this is more colloquial and often assumes context; the standard polite form adds 吗.
Use 吗 to turn any declarative sentence into a yes/no question. It does not imply any change of state; it simply asks whether the statement is true. For example, '你吃吗?' means 'Are you eating?', not 'Have you eaten yet?'
吗 is neutral regarding time or completion; it just seeks confirmation of the proposition.
At a glance
| 了 | 吗 | |
|---|---|---|
| Function | Indicates change of state or completed action | Forms yes/no questions |
| Focus | Change or new situation | Confirmation of a fact |
| Usage in questions | Combined with 吗 (了吗) to ask if a change occurred | Used alone to form a question (no change implication) |
| Typical context | After verbs to show completion (e.g., 吃了) | At the end of a statement to question it (e.g., 你好吗?) |
| Translation hint | 'already' or 'yet' | Direct yes/no question |
Examples
- 了你吃饭了吗?Nǐ chīfàn le ma?Have you eaten yet?Uses 了吗 to ask about completion of the action.
- 吗你吃饭吗?Nǐ chīfàn ma?Are you eating? / Do you eat?Simple yes/no, no change-of-state implication.
- 了你看了那部电影吗?Nǐ kàn le nà bù diànyǐng ma?Have you seen that movie?Pattern: verb + 了 + object + 吗 to ask about completion.
- 吗你明天来吗?Nǐ míngtiān lái ma?Are you coming tomorrow?Future event, no change involved.
- 了你来了吗?Nǐ lái le ma?Have you arrived?Focus on change of state (arrival).
Common mistakes
- Using 吗 for a completion question without 了: e.g., 你吃饭吗? to mean 'Have you eaten?' – should use 你吃饭了吗?
- Adding 了 to every question: e.g., 你好了吗? to mean 'How are you?' – should be 你好吗? unless asking if a change occurred (e.g., after illness).
- Confusing 了吗 with 了 in statements: forgetting that 了吗 makes a question, not a statement.
- Using 了 in a question about a habitual action: e.g., 你每天吃饭了吗? – 了 is inappropriate for habitual actions; use plain 吗.
FAQ
- When do I use 了吗 vs just 吗?
- Use 了吗 when you want to ask if something has happened or if a state has changed, e.g., 你吃饭了吗? for 'Have you eaten yet?'. Use plain 吗 to ask a general yes/no question about a present or future situation, e.g., 你吃饭吗? for 'Are you eating?'.
- Can I use 了 alone in a question without 吗?
- Yes, in casual speech you can raise intonation: 你吃了? But adding 吗 is more standard and polite.
- Why is 你好吗? correct but 你好? is also used?
- 你好? is informal; 你好吗? is the conventional greeting. 了呢 is not used in this greeting.
- Do I always need 了 in a question about the past?
- No. If you ask 'Did you go?' without focusing on completion, you can say 你去了吗? but also 你去过了吗? with 过. Use 了 when you want to emphasize that the action is completed.