From 65aeee2f28f6241b5f48dab79bb20d8cbd3cd0a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Estefania Cassingena Navone <85124911+estefaniacn@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2025 10:46:55 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] fix(curriculum): improve explanation of A1 Chinese greetings and introductions (#64752) --- .../68ef8ef35b26ef1fd797d55f.md | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/zh-a1-learn-understanding-greetings-and-introductions/68ef8ef35b26ef1fd797d55f.md b/curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/zh-a1-learn-understanding-greetings-and-introductions/68ef8ef35b26ef1fd797d55f.md index 1eac02dbf18..215f1fe15f9 100644 --- a/curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/zh-a1-learn-understanding-greetings-and-introductions/68ef8ef35b26ef1fd797d55f.md +++ b/curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/zh-a1-learn-understanding-greetings-and-introductions/68ef8ef35b26ef1fd797d55f.md @@ -60,7 +60,8 @@ Teacher is a profession, not a nationality. `我是中国人 (wǒ shì zhōng guó rén)` uses the structure `我是 (wǒ shì)` + nationality to state where someone is from. -`我是 (wǒ shì)` means "I am...". A nationality is formed by adding `人 (rén)` meaning "person" to the country name. +`我是 (wǒ shì)` means "I am...". A nationality is formed by adding `人 (rén)`, meaning "person", to the country name. + `中国 (zhōng guó)` means "China", so `中国人 (zhōng guó rén)` means a person from China. Therefore, Wang Hua is saying she is Chinese.